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Elucidating the Mechanism of Fe Incorporation in In Situ Synthesized Co-Fe Oxygen-Evolving Nanocatalysts.

Thi Ha My PhamTzu-Hsien ShenYoungdon KoLiping ZhongLoris LombardoWen LuoSatoshi HorikeVasiliki TileliAndreas Züttel
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Ni- and Co-based catalysts with added Fe demonstrate promising activity in the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) during alkaline water electrolysis, with the presence of Fe in a certain quantity being crucial for their enhanced performance. The mode of incorporation, local placement, and structure of Fe ions in the host catalyst, as well as their direct/indirect contribution to enhancing the OER activity, remain under active investigation. Herein, the mechanism of Fe incorporation into a Co-based host was investigated using an in situ synthesized Co-Fe catalyst in an alkaline electrolyte containing Co 2+ and Fe 3+ . Fe was found to be uniformly incorporated, which occurs solely after the anodic deposition of the Co host structure and results in exceptional OER activity with an overpotential of 319 mV at 10 mA cm -2 and a Tafel slope of 28.3 mV dec -1 . Studies on the lattice structure, chemical oxidation states, and mass changes indicated that Fe is incorporated into the Co host structure by replacing the Co 3+ sites with Fe 3+ from the electrolyte. Operando Raman measurements revealed that the presence of doped Fe in the Co host structure reduces the transition potential of the in situ Co-Fe catalyst to the OER-active phase CoO 2 . The findings of our facile synthesis of highly active and stable Co-Fe particle catalysts provide a comprehensive understanding of the role of Fe in Co-based electrocatalysts, covering aspects that include the incorporation mode, local structure, placement, and mechanistic role in enhancing the OER activity.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • visible light
  • aqueous solution
  • ionic liquid
  • highly efficient
  • risk assessment
  • mass spectrometry
  • transition metal
  • oxide nanoparticles