Reconstructed Ir‒O‒Mo species with strong Brønsted acidity for acidic water oxidation.
Shiyi ChenShishi ZhangLei GuoLun PanChengxiang ShiXiangwen ZhangZhen-Feng HuangGuidong YangJi-Jun ZouPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Surface reconstruction generates real active species in electrochemical conditions; rational regulating reconstruction in a targeted manner is the key for constructing highly active catalyst. Herein, we use the high-valence Mo modulated orthorhombic Pr 3 Ir 1-x Mo x O 7 as model to activate lattice oxygen and cations, achieving directional and accelerated surface reconstruction to produce self-terminated Ir‒O bri ‒Mo (O bri represents the bridge oxygen) active species that is highly active for acidic water oxidation. The doped Mo not only contributes to accelerated surface reconstruction due to optimized Ir‒O covalency and more prone dissolution of Pr, but also affords the improved durability resulted from Mo-buffered charge compensation, thereby preventing fierce Ir dissolution and excessive lattice oxygen loss. As such, Ir‒O bri ‒Mo species could be directionally generated, in which the strong Brønsted acidity of O bri induced by remaining Mo assists with the facilitated deprotonation of oxo intermediates, following bridging-oxygen-assisted deprotonation pathway. Consequently, the optimal catalyst exhibits the best activity with an overpotential of 259 mV to reach 10 mA cm geo -2 , 50 mV lower than undoped counterpart, and shows improved stability for over 200 h. This work provides a strategy of directional surface reconstruction to constructing strong Brønsted acid sites in IrO x species, demonstrating the perspective of targeted electrocatalyst fabrication under in situ realistic reaction conditions.