Jiali WangHui Ying TanChia-Shuo HsuYou-Chiuan ChuChing-Wei ChanKuan-Hsu ChenXuan-Rou LinYi-Chun LeeHsiao-Chien ChenHao Ming Chen2025-05-152025-05-152025-04-01https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/729342Electronic structures stand at the center to essentially understand the catalytic performance and reaction mechanism of atomically dispersed transition-metal–nitrogen–carbon catalysts (ADTCs). However, under realistic electrocatalytic conditions, the dynamic electronic disturbance at metal centers originating from complicated interactions with microenvironments is commonly neglected, which makes a true structure–property correlation highly ambiguous. Here, we employ operando time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy to delve deeply into dynamic electronic behaviors of a family of transition-metal centers that are observed to adaptively vary in the metal–ligand configuration during the CO2 electroreduction reaction. We identify dynamic electronic/geometric configuration and d-orbital occupation under working conditions, demonstrating an unprecedentedly precise activity descriptor, i.e., dynamic axial dz2 electron, for the CO2-to-CO conversion. Direct results validate that the half-occupied state suggests the optimum binding behaviors with intermediates, significantly promoting CO production, which has been demonstrated by a significant kinetics enhancement of 1 to 2 orders of magnitude as compared with fully occupied and unoccupied states. This work presents the first empirical demonstration for a real correlation between the dynamic electronic/geometric configuration and catalytic kinetics in ADTCs, paving a new way for modulating catalysts and designing highly efficient reaction pathways.enAdapting Atomic Configuration Steers Dynamic Half-Occupied State for Efficient CO2 Electroreduction to COjournal article10.1021/jacs.5c03121