In Situ Electrochemical Conversion of an Ultrathin Tannin Nickel Iron Complex Film as an Efficient Oxygen Evolution Reaction Electrocatalyst.
Yanmei ShiYu YuYu LiangYonghua DuBin ZhangPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is an important half reaction in many energy conversion and storage techniques. However, the development of a low-cost easy-prepared OER electrocatalyst with high mass activity and rapid kinetics is still challenging. Herein, we report the facile deposition of tannin-NiFe (TANF) complex film on carbon fiber paper (CP) as a highly efficient OER electrocatalyst. TANF gives rapid OER reaction kinetics with a very small Tafel slope of 28 mV dec-1 . The mass activity of TANF reaches 9.17×103 Ag-1 at an overpotential of 300 mV, which is nearly 200-times larger than that of NiFe double layered hydroxide. Furthermore, tannic acid in TANF can be electrochemically extracted under anodic potential, leaving the inorganic composite Nix Fe1-x Oy Hz as the OER-active species. This work may provide a guide to probing the electrochemical transformation and investigating the reactive species of other metal-organic complexes as heterogeneous electrocatalysts.
Keyphrases
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- single molecule
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