A corrosion-engineered transition metal multi-anionic interface for efficient electrocatalysis toward overall water splitting

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-11-15
DOI 10.1039/D3NJ04235A
Impact Factor 3.591
Authors

Qiaolin Guo, Xiang Liu, Changwang Ke, Xiaofei Yang


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Abstract

Rational design and controllable synthesis of transition metal multi-anionic structures to cooperatively catalyze the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) remain a great challenge due to the requirements of high current density and long-term durability for water splitting. Herein, a self-supported sheet-on-sheet hierarchical interface was synthesized via a facile corrosion engineering strategy, where the Ni3S2 microsheet arrays were pre-grown on nickel foam and they provided abundant surface active sites to grow FeOOH nanosheets vertically. The obtained FeOOH/Ni3S2 heterostructure exhibited well-defined dimensions and intimate interface contact with oxygen and a sulfur anion structure, which can modulate the electronic structure of interfacial active sites. Hence, the optimized FeOOH/Ni3S2 required overpotentials of 345 mV and 269 mV to achieve a current density of 100 mA cm−2 for the HER and the OER, respectively. Moreover, it required a voltage of 1.855 V to achieve overall water splitting at a current density of 100 mA cm−2. The interfacial electronic interaction and multi-anionic hierarchical structure not only facilitate the electron transfer between the FeOOH/Ni3S2 surface and intermediate species but also accelerate the kinetic rate. This paper provides a new avenue to design multi-anionic hierarchical structures as cost-effective and highly stable electrocatalysts for practical overall water splitting.

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New Journal of Chemistry
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NJC (New Journal of Chemistry) is a broad-based primary journal encompassing all branches of chemistry and its sub-disciplines. It contains full research articles, communications, perspectives and focus articles. This well-established journal, owned by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) of France, has been co-published with the Royal Society of Chemistry since January 1998. NJC is the forum for the publication of high-quality, original and significant work that opens new directions in chemistry or other scientific disciplines. In addition to having a significant chemical component, work published in NJC must demonstrate that it will have an impact on areas of research other than that of the reported work.

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