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Oxygen-Defect-Rich Cobalt Ferrite Nanoparticles for Practical Water Electrolysis with High Activity and Durability.

Bharati DebnathSahanaz ParvinHarsha DixitSayan Bhattacharyya
Published in: ChemSusChem (2020)
The scope of any metal oxide as a catalyst for driving electrocatalytic reactions depends on its electronic structure, which is correlated to its oxygen-defect density. Likewise, to transform a spinel oxide, such as cobalt ferrite (CoFe2 O4 ), into a worthy universal-pH, bifunctional electrocatalyst for the hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions (HER and OER, respectively), oxygen defects need to be regulated. Prepared by coprecipitation and inert calcination at 650 °C, CoFe2 O4 nanoparticles (NPs) require 253 and 300 mV OER overpotentials to reach current densities of 10 and 100 mA cm-2 , respectively, if nickel foam is used as a substrate. With cost-effective carbon fiber paper, the OER overpotential increases to 372 mV at 10 mA cm-2 at pH 14. The NPs prepared at 550 °C require HER overpotentials of 218, 245, and 314 mV at -10 mA cm-2 in alkaline, acidic, and neutral pH, respectively. The intrinsic activity is reflected from turnover frequencies of >3 O2  s-1 and >5 H2  s-1 at overpotentials of 398 and 259 mV, respectively. If coupled for overall water splitting, the extremely durable two-electrode electrolyzer requires a cell potential of only 1.63 V to reach 10 mA cm-2 at pH 14. The homologous couple also splits seawater at impressively low cell voltages of 1.72 and 1.47 V at room temperature and 80 °C, respectively.
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