Morphology Tuning via Linker Modulation: Metal-Free Covalent Organic Nanostructures with Exceptional Chemical Stability for Electrocatalytic Water Splitting.
Shayan KarakKalipada KonerArun KarmakarShibani MohataYusuke NishiyamaNghia Tuan DuongNeethu ThomasThalasseril G AjithkumarMunshi Sahid HossainSubhajit BandyopadhyaySubrata KunduRahul BanerjeePublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
The development of synthetic routes for the formation of robust porous organic polymers (POPs) with well-defined nanoscale morphology is fundamentally significant for their practical applications. The thermodynamic characteristics that arise from reversible covalent bonding impart intrinsic chemical instability in the polymers, thereby impeding their overall potential. Herein, we report a unique strategy to overcome the stability issue by designing robust imidazole-linked POPs via tandem reversible/irreversible bond formation. Incorporating inherent rigidity into the secondary building units leads to robust microporous polymeric nanostructures with hollow-spherical morphologies. An in-depth analysis by extensive solid-state NMR (1D and 2D) study on 1 H, 13 C, and 14 N nuclei elucidated the bonding and revealed the high purity of the newly designed imidazole-based POPs. The nitrogen-rich polymeric nanostructures have been further used as metal-free electrocatalysts for water splitting. In particular, the rigid POPs show excellent catalytic activity toward the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) with long-term durability. Among them, the most efficient OER electrocatalyst (TAT-TFBE) requires 314 mV of overpotential to drive 10 mAcm -2 current density, demonstrating its superiority over state-of-the-art catalysts (RuO 2 and IrO 2 ). This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.