Login / Signup

Quenching as a Route to Defect-Rich Ru-Pyrochlore Electrocatalysts toward the Oxygen Evolution Reaction.

Tongtong LiuShaoxuan YangJingyu GuanJin NiuZhengping ZhangFeng Wang
Published in: Small methods (2021)
Defects have a significant impact on the electrocatalysts performance. Introducing defect structures in metal oxides such as pyrochlores and perovskites has proved to be an effective strategy to enhance electrocatalytic activity. However, it is hard to build numerous defect sites in such high-temperature oxides due to the strong metal-oxygen bonds and the so-called self-purification effect, which becomes increasingly important as the particle size reduced to the nanoscale. Here, a facile strategy is demonstrated to fabricate defect-rich yttrium ruthenate oxides Y 2 Ru 2 O 7- δ with the pyrochlore structure (denoted D rich -YRO) by the liquid nitrogen (<-196 °C) quenching. Owing to the almost instantaneous cooling in oxygen-deficient condition, a large number of defects-including oxygen vacancies, grain boundaries, pores and surficial disorder-are preserved in the room temperature material and act as electrocatalytic active sites for oxygen evolution. As a result, D rich -YRO shows excellent catalytic activity and high electrochemical stability, along with a high performance in the operation of proton exchange membrane electrolyzer. The quenching strategy employed in this work provides a facile approach for constructing defect-rich structures in high-temperature oxides and should lead to new applications in energy conversion and storage devices for such materials.
Keyphrases
  • high temperature
  • room temperature
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • ionic liquid
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • metal organic framework
  • gold nanoparticles
  • highly efficient
  • molecularly imprinted
  • high speed
  • single molecule