Crystalline-Dependent Discharge Process of Locally Enhanced Electrooxidation Activity on Ni 2 P.
Ling WangKun ZhaoZhihao QiYonggang YangWei LuoWenshu YangLong-Hua LiJinhui HaoWeidong ShiPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
The state-of-the-art transition-based electrocatalysts in alkaline media generally suffer from unavoidable surface reconstruction during oxygen evolution reaction measurements, leading to the collapse and loss of the crystalline matrix. Low potential discharge offers a gentle way for surface reconstruction and thus realizes the manipulation of the real active site. Nevertheless, the absence of a fundamental understanding focus on this discharge region renders the functional phase, either the crystalline or amorphous matrix, for the controllable reconstruction still undecidable. Herein, we report a scenario to employ different crystalline matrices as electrocatalysts for discharge region reconstruction. The representative low crystalline Ni 2 P (LC-Ni 2 P) possesses a relatively weak surface structure compared with highly crystalline or amorphous Ni 2 P (HC-Ni 2 P or A-Ni 2 P), which contributes abundant oxygen vacancies after the discharge process. The fast discharge behavior of LC-Ni 2 P leads to the uniform distribution of these vacancies and thus endows the inner interface with reactant activating functionality. A high increase in current density of 36.7% is achieved at 2.32 V (vs RHE) for the LC-Ni 2 P electrode. The understanding of the discharge behavior in this study, on different crystalline matrices, presents insights into the establishment of controllable surface reconstruction for an effective oxygen evolution reaction.