Enhanced Activity and Acid pH Stability of Prussian Blue-type Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysts Processed by Chemical Etching

Author

Han, Lijuan

Tang, Pengyi

Reyes-Carmona, Álvaro

Rodríguez-García, Bárbara

Torréns, Mabel

Morante, Joan Ramon

Arbiol, Jordi

Galan-Mascaros, Jose Ramon

Publication date

2016



Abstract

<p> The development of upscalable oxygen evolving electrocatalysts from earth-abundant metals able to operate in neutral or acidic environments and low overpotentials remains a fundamental challenge for the realization of artificial photosynthesis. In this study, we report a highly active phase of heterobimetallic cyanide-bridged electrocatalysts able to promote water oxidation under neutral, basic (pH &lt; 13), and acidic conditions (pH &gt; 1). Cobalt&minus;iron Prussian blue-type thin films, formed by chemical etching of Co(OH)1.0(CO3)0.5&middot;nH2O nanocrystals, yield a dramatic enhancement of the catalytic performance toward oxygen production, when compared with previous reports for analogous materials. Electrochemical, spectroscopic, and structural studies confirm the excellent performance, stability, and corrosion resistance, even when compared with state-of-the-art metal oxide catalysts under moderate overpotentials and in a remarkably large pH range, including acid media where most cost-effective water oxidation catalysts are not useful. The origin of the superior electrocatalytic activity toward water oxidation appears to be in the optimized interfacial matching between catalyst and electrode surface obtained through this fabrication method.</p>

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Version of

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Grant Agreement Number

SEV-2013-0319

CTQ2015-71287-R

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ERC/FP7/ 279313

Related items

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad

European Research Council

ICIQ Foundation

Severo Ochoa Excellence Accreditation

ERC Starting Grant

Proyectos de I+D

CHEMCOMP

Documents

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Rights

© 2016 American Chemical Society

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