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Nonmetallic Active Sites on Nickel Phosphide in Oxygen Evolution Reaction.

Pengfei ZhangHongmei QiuHuicong LiJiangang HeYingying XuRongming Wang
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Efficient and durable catalysts are crucial for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The discovery of the high OER catalytic activity in Ni 12 P 5 has attracted a great deal of attention recently. Herein, the microscopic mechanism of OER on the surface of Ni 12 P 5 is studied using density functional theory calculations (DFT) and ab initio molecular dynamics simulation (AIMD). Our results demonstrate that the H 2 O molecule is preferentially adsorbed on the P atom instead of on the Ni atom, indicating that the nonmetallic P atom is the active site of the OER reaction. AIMD simulations show that the dissociation of H from the H 2 O molecule takes place in steps; the hydrogen bond changes from O a -H⋯O b to O a ⋯H-O b , then the hydrogen bond breaks and an H + is dissociated. In the OER reaction on nickel phosphides, the rate-determining step is the formation of the OOH group and the overpotential of Ni 12 P 5 is the lowest, thus showing enhanced catalytic activity over other nickel phosphides. Moreover, we found that the charge of Ni and P sites has a linear relationship with the adsorption energy of OH and O, which can be utilized to optimize the OER catalyst.
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