TY - JOUR
T1 - Loose spherical FeOOH/MnO nanoarrays from a simple in situ hydrothermal method for enhanced oxygen evolution electrocatalysis
AU - Meng, Dexing
AU - Wei, Lihai
AU - Shi, Jiawei
AU - Jiang, Qianqian
AU - Wu, Xiaodong
AU - Tang, Jianguo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/5/20
Y1 - 2023/5/20
N2 - The development of abundant, low-cost, stable and efficient non-precious metal OER electrocatalysts is of great significance in large-scale water splitting for hydrogen production. Herein, loose spherical (Spherical-like composed of loose nanoarrays) MnFe bimetal oxide nanoarrays based on nickel foam were successfully synthesized by a simple in situ hydrothermal method. The loose nanoarrays facilitate water adsorption and exposure of active sites, enabling the catalyst to exhibit excellent electrocatalytic OER activity in alkaline media with an overpotential of 209 mV and a Tafel slope of 70 mV·dec−1. The addition of Fe greatly improves the electrical conductivity of the composites and the Fe site as the main active site, which together to the enhanced catalytic performance of FeOOH/MnO@NF (FeOOH/MnO In situ growth on Nickel Foam). In addition, the low crystallinity characteristic of the material is favorable for lattice distortion shrinkage, and the formation of Fe/Mn-O sites can accelerate the charge transfer rate, thereby accelerating the OER process. Meanwhile, the results of density functional theory calculations show that due to the strong interaction of electrons between the heterostructure, the displacement of the D-band center of the metal atom and the enhanced density of states near the Fermi level can adjust the binding energy intensity, which can affect the OER process, thereby improving the electrocatalytic performance. The findings broaden the exploration avenues of bimetallic oxyhydroxides as materials for water electrolysis and provides a new strategy for energy conversion and storage of sustainable energy.
AB - The development of abundant, low-cost, stable and efficient non-precious metal OER electrocatalysts is of great significance in large-scale water splitting for hydrogen production. Herein, loose spherical (Spherical-like composed of loose nanoarrays) MnFe bimetal oxide nanoarrays based on nickel foam were successfully synthesized by a simple in situ hydrothermal method. The loose nanoarrays facilitate water adsorption and exposure of active sites, enabling the catalyst to exhibit excellent electrocatalytic OER activity in alkaline media with an overpotential of 209 mV and a Tafel slope of 70 mV·dec−1. The addition of Fe greatly improves the electrical conductivity of the composites and the Fe site as the main active site, which together to the enhanced catalytic performance of FeOOH/MnO@NF (FeOOH/MnO In situ growth on Nickel Foam). In addition, the low crystallinity characteristic of the material is favorable for lattice distortion shrinkage, and the formation of Fe/Mn-O sites can accelerate the charge transfer rate, thereby accelerating the OER process. Meanwhile, the results of density functional theory calculations show that due to the strong interaction of electrons between the heterostructure, the displacement of the D-band center of the metal atom and the enhanced density of states near the Fermi level can adjust the binding energy intensity, which can affect the OER process, thereby improving the electrocatalytic performance. The findings broaden the exploration avenues of bimetallic oxyhydroxides as materials for water electrolysis and provides a new strategy for energy conversion and storage of sustainable energy.
KW - Fe-based composites
KW - Heterostructure
KW - In situ hydrothermal
KW - Low crystallinity
KW - Oxygen evolution reaction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150830448&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.colsurfa.2023.131228
DO - 10.1016/j.colsurfa.2023.131228
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85150830448
SN - 0927-7757
VL - 665
JO - Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects
JF - Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects
M1 - 131228
ER -