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Confirming High-Valent Iron as Highly Active Species of Water Oxidation on the Fe, V-Coupled Bimetallic Electrocatalyst: In Situ Analysis of X-ray Absorption and Mössbauer Spectroscopy.

Rashid MehmoodWenjun FanXu HuJiangnan LiPeijia LiuYashi ZhangZhang ZhangJunhu WangMin LiuFuxiang Zhang
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Iron (Fe)-based bimetallic oxides/hydroxides have been widely investigated for promising alkaline electrochemical oxygen evolution reactions (OERs), but it still remains argumentative whether Fe 3+ or Fe 4+ intermediates are highly active for efficient OER. Here, we rationally designed and prepared one Fe, V-based bimetallic composite nanosheet by employing the OER-inert V element as a promoter to completely avoid the argument of real active metals and using our recently developed one-dimensional conductive nickel phosphide (NP) as a support. The as-obtained hierarchical nanocomposite (denoted as FeVO x /NP) was evaluated as a model catalyst to gain insight into the iron-based species as highly active OER sites by performing in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy and 57 Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy measurements. It was found that the high-valent Fe 4+ species can only be detected during the OER process of the FeVO x /NP nanocomposite instead of the iron counterpart itself. Together with the fact that the OER activities of both the vanadium and iron counterparts are by far worse than that of the FeVO x /NP composite, we can confirm that the high-valent Fe 4+ formed are the highly active species for efficient OER. As demonstrated by density functional theory simulations, the composite of Fe and V metals is proposed to cause a decreased Gibbs free energy as well as theoretical overpotential of water oxidation with respect to its counterparts, as is responsible for its excellent OER performance with extremely low OER overpotential (290 mV at 500 mA cm -2 ) and extraordinary stability (1000 h at 100 mA cm -2 ).
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