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Construction of Self-Supporting NiCoFe Nanotube Arrays Enabling High-Efficiency Alkaline Oxygen Evolution.

Ruopeng LiYaqiang LiPeixia YangPenghui RenAnmin LiuShizheng WenJinqiu ZhangMaozhong An
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Enhancing the intrinsic activity and modulating the electrode-electrolyte interface microenvironment of nickel-based candidates are essential for breaking through the sluggish kinetics limitation of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Herein, a ternary nickel-cobalt-iron solid solution with delicate hollow nanoarrays architecture (labeled as NiCoFe-NTs) was designed and fabricated via a ZnO-templated electrodeposition strategy. Owing to the synergistic nanostructure and composition feature, NiCoFe-NT presents desirable alkaline OER performance, with a η 10 and η 500 of 187 and 310 mV, respectively, along with favorable long-term durability. In-depth analyses identify the heterogeneous nickel-based (oxy)hydroxide species derived from the oxidative reconstruction acting as an active contributor for oxygen evolution. Impressively, the regulatory mechanism of the catalytic performance by a rationally designed nanostructure was elucidated by compressive analyses; that is, the faster gas release processes induced by nanotube arrays can modulate the heterogeneous interface states during OER, which effectively facilitates the electrochemical charge-mass transfer to promote the reaction kinetics. To assess the practical feasibility, an alkaline water electrolyzer and a CO 2 electrochemical reduction flow cell were constructed by coupling the anodic NiCoFe-NTs and cathodic nickel phosphides (Ni 2 P-NF) and metallic Cu electrocatalysts, respectively, both of which achieved high-efficiency operation.
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