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Abundant Surface Defects in Cobalt Hydroxides/Oxyhydroxides Induced by Zinc Species Facilitate Water Oxidation.

Shaojie XuHuijie NiXiaodeng ZhangCheng HanJinjie Qian
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
The complex process of the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) severely hinders overall water splitting, which further limits the large-scale production and application of hydrogen energy. In this work, one type of bimetallic coordination polymer of ZnCoBTC using the MOF-on-MOF strategy has been synthesized where both Co(II) and Zn(II) cations exhibit the same coordination environment. By applying an electric potential, the predesigned bimetallic MOF precursor can be conveniently degraded into CoO x H y as an active species for efficient OER. Owing to the dissolution of ZnO x H y species, in situ formed disordered defects on the external surface of the catalyst increase the specific surface area as well as expose abundant active materials. Therefore, the ZnCoO x H y nanosheet shows excellent OER performance and reaches an overpotential of only 334 mV at 10 mA cm -2 with a Tafel slope of 66.4 mV dec -1 , indicating fast reaction kinetics. The results demonstrate that metals with the same coordination environment can undergo in situ replacement or secondary growth on the pristine MOF, and they can be electrochemically degraded into highly efficient catalysts for future energy applications.
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