Multivalence-State Tungsten Species Facilitated Iridium Loading for Robust Acidic Water Oxidation.
Zeyu GuanJiankun LiShiyi LiKeyu WangLinfeng LeiYixing WangLinzhou ZhuangZhi XuPublished in: Small methods (2024)
The development of the proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer (PEMWE) is still limited by the prohibitive cost and scarcity of iridium (Ir)-based oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalyst. This work presents a novel catalyst synthesized by precursor-atomization and rapid joule-heating method, successfully doping iridium atoms into polyvalent tungsten blends (W 0 , W 5+ , W 6+ ) based on titanium substrate. The vacancy engineering of unsaturated tungsten oxide (W 5+ , W 6+ ) reconstructs the electronic structure of the catalyst surface, which resulting in the low-valence state iridium species, avoiding excessive oxidation of iridium and accelerating the catalytic kinetics. Meanwhile, metallic tungsten (W 0 ) improves the conductivity of catalyst and guarantees the stable existence of oxygen vacancy. The TiIrWO x possesses excellent performance in acidic OER catalysis, requiring overpotential of only 181 mV to drive 10.0 mA cm -2 , and exhibiting a high mass activity of 753 A g Ir -1 at an overpotential of 300 mV. The membrane electrode assembly (MEA) with TiIrWO x as anode electrocatalyst can reduce the Ir consumption amount by >60% compared to commercial IrO 2 , and it can operated over 120 h at a current density of 1.0 A cm -2 .