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1.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 255, 2021 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33431853

ABSTRACT

Understanding the function of surface states on photoanodes is crucial for unraveling the underlying reaction mechanisms of water oxidation. For hematite photoanodes, only one type of surface states with higher oxidative energy (S1) has been proposed and verified as reaction intermediate, while the other surface state located at lower potentials (S2) was assigned to inactive or recombination sites. Through employing rate law analyses and systematical (photo)electrochemical characterizations, here we show that S2 is an active reaction intermediate for water oxidation as well. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the reaction kinetics and dynamic interactions of both S1 and S2 depend significantly on operational parameters, such as illumination intensity, nature of the electrolyte, and applied potential. These insights into the individual reaction kinetics and the interplay of both surface states are decisive for designing efficient photoanodes.

2.
Dalton Trans ; 49(8): 2468-2476, 2020 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31993601

ABSTRACT

Three M-doped LDHs (M = noble metal active site, LDH = layered double hydroxides; Ir-1, Ir-ZnAl; Ru, Ru-ZnAl; Ir-2, Ir-MgAl), containing small amounts of M (ca. 2 mol% and even <1 mol% for Ru and Ir, respectively), were prepared by following simple and established synthetic procedures. Their characterization indicates that M atoms are effectively incorporated into the brucite-like layers of LDH, without phase segregation. The resulting materials catalyse electrochemical water oxidation (WO), when immobilized in carbon paste electrodes, with performances that exceed those of the benchmark system IrO2, as probed by linear sweep voltammetry (LSV). Some of these catalysts undergo continuous activation upon chronoamperometric and chronopotentiometric treatments over several hours. The crystalline structure of all of them is preserved during electrocatalytic experiments, and no significant leaching of noble metal in solution is detected. The results herein reported highlight the remarkable potential of these doped M-LDHs and confirm that dispersing Ir and Ru centers in layered and cheap inorganic materials results in easily accessible metal centers, providing highly active catalysts, while minimizing the utilization of noble metals.

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