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1.
Chemistry ; 29(71): e202302398, 2023 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37728302

ABSTRACT

Electrocatalytic water splitting is one of the most commercially valuable pathways of hydrogen production especially combined with renewable electricity; however, efficient and durable electrocatalysts are urgently needed to reduce electric energy consumption. Here, we reported a Ru and Fe co-doped Mo2 C on nitrogen doped carbon via a controllable two-step method, which can be used for efficient and enduring hydrogen evolution reaction. At 10, 100 and 200 mA cm-2 in acidic electrolyte, the resultant Ru-Fe/Mo2 C@NC delivered low overpotentials of 31, 78 and 103 mV, respectively, which are comparable to that of the commercial Pt/C (20 wt %). At an applied current density of 100 mA cm-2 , stable hydrogen production was conducted for 120 h without obvious degradation. In alkaline media, Ru-Fe/Mo2 C@NC can also deliver a current density of 100 mA cm-2 for more than 100 h. Furthermore, the Ru-Fe/Mo2 C@NC electrocatalyst was used as cathode in an anion exchange membrane water electrolyzer under industrial environments for robust hydrogen production. The characterization and electrochemical results prove the synergism effects between Ru, Fe dopants and Mo2 C for promoting hydrogen evolution activity. This work would pave a new avenue to fabricate low-cost, high-performance hydrogen evolution electrocatalysts for industrial water electrolyzers.

2.
Small Methods ; 6(10): e2200484, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36047656

ABSTRACT

Developing efficient electrocatalysts at ampere-scale current densities is of paramount importance to advance industrial applications of alkaline water electrolysis. Herein, a hierarchical nanostructured electrocatalyst with two-dimensional Co(OH)x nanosheets grown on one-dimensional NiMoOx nanorods over three-dimensional porous Ni foam substrate is designed. The resulting catalyst delivers ultrahigh hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity in the alkaline solution, which only requires overpotentials of 185 and 332 mV to achieve the current densities of -500 and -1000 mA cm-2 in 1.0 m KOH, respectively, and shows robust stability at -1000 mA cm-2 for 11 days. The unique 1D @ 2D hierarchical structures with abundant hetero-interfaces can not only expose sufficient active sites but also boost alkaline HER kinetics with fast water dissociation ability. This present work may pave a new insight to design efficient electrocatalysts with hierarchical structures for alkaline HER with industry-level current density and stability.

3.
Small ; 18(19): e2200303, 2022 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35388963

ABSTRACT

High-valence metal-doped multimetal (oxy)hydroxides outperform noble metal electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) owing to the modified energetics between 3d metals and high-valence dopants. However, the rational design of sufficient and subtle modulators is still challenging. With a multimetal layered double hydroxide (LDH) as the OER catalyst, this study introduces a series of operando high-valence dopants (Cr, Ru, Ce, and V), which can restrict the 3+ valence states in the LDH template to prevent phase separation and operando transfer to the >3+ valence states for sufficient electronic interaction during the OER process. Through density functional theory simulations, ultrathin Cr-doped NiFe (NiFeCr) LDH is synthesized with strong electronic interaction between Cr dopants and NiFe bimetallic sites, evidenced by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. The resulting NiFeCr-LDH catalyzes the OER with ultralow overpotentials of 189 and 284 mV, obtaining current densities of 10 and 1000 mA cm-2 , respectively. Further, a NiFeCr-LDH anode is coupled in the anion exchange membrane electrolyzers to promote alkaline water splitting and CO2 -to-CO electrolysis, which achieves low full cell voltages at high current densities.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(13): 6028-6039, 2022 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35302356

ABSTRACT

Water-alkaline electrolysis holds a great promise for industry-scale hydrogen production but is hindered by the lack of enabling hydrogen evolution reaction electrocatalysts to operate at ampere-level current densities under low overpotentials. Here, we report the use of hydrogen spillover-bridged water dissociation/hydrogen formation processes occurring at the synergistically hybridized Ni3S2/Cr2S3 sites to incapacitate the inhibition effect of high-current-density-induced high hydrogen coverage at the water dissociation site and concurrently promote Volmer/Tafel processes. The mechanistic insights critically important to enable ampere-level current density operation are depicted from the experimental and theoretical studies. The Volmer process is drastically boosted by the strong H2O adsorption at Cr5c sites of Cr2S3, the efficient H2O* dissociation via a heterolytic cleavage process (Cr5c-H2O* + S3c(#) → Cr5c-OH* + S3c-H#) on the Cr5c/S3c sites in Cr2S3, and the rapid desorption of OH* from Cr5c sites of Cr2S3 via a new water-assisted desorption mechanism (Cr5c-OH* + H2O(aq) → Cr5c-H2O* + OH-(aq)), while the efficient Tafel process is achieved through hydrogen spillover to rapidly transfer H# from the synergistically located H-rich site (Cr2S3) to the H-deficient site (Ni3S2) with excellent hydrogen formation activity. As a result, the hybridized Ni3S2/Cr2S3 electrocatalyst can readily achieve a current density of 3.5 A cm-2 under an overpotential of 251 ± 3 mV in 1.0 M KOH electrolyte. The concept exemplified in this work provides a useful means to address the shortfalls of ampere-level current-density-tolerant Hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) electrocatalysts.

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