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Competitive Coordination-Oriented Monodispersed Ruthenium Sites in Conductive MOF/LDH Hetero-Nanotree Catalysts for Efficient Overall Water Splitting in Alkaline Media.

Ying WangShuo WangZe-Lin MaLi-Ting YanXue-Bo ZhaoYing-Ying XueJia-Min HuoXiao YuanShu-Ni LiQuan-Guo Zhai
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Rational exploration of efficient, inexpensive, and robust electrocatalysts is critical for the efficient water splitting. Conjugated conductive metal-organic frameworks (cMOFs) with multicomponent layered double hydroxides (LDHs) to construct bifunctional heterostructure catalysts are considered as an efficient but complicated strategy. Here, the fabrication of a cMOF/LDH hetero-nanotree array catalyst (CoNiRu-NT) coupled with monodispersed ruthenium (Ru) sites via a controllable grafted-growth strategy is reported. Rich-amino hexaiminotriphenylene linkers coordinate with the LDH nanotrunk to form cMOF nanobranches, providing numerous anchoring sites to precisely confine and stabilize RuN 4 sites. Moreover, monodispersed and reduced Ru moieties facilitate H 2 O adsorption and dissociation, and the heterointerface between the cMOF and the LDH further modifies the chemical and electronic structures. Optimized CoNiRu-NT displays a significant increase in electrochemical water-splitting properties in alkaline media, affording low overpotentials of 22 mV at 10 mA cm -2 and 255 mV at 20 mA cm -2 for the hydrogen evolution reaction and oxygen evolution reaction, respectively. In an actual electrochemical system, CoNiRu-NT drives an overall water splitting at a low cell voltage of 1.47 V to reach 10 mA cm -2 . This performance is comparable to that of pure noble-metal-based materials and superior to most reported MOF-based catalysts.
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