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Facet-Dependent Surface Restructuring on Nickel (Oxy)hydroxides: A Self-Activation Process for Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction.

Yunduo YaoGuangming ZhaoXuyun GuoPei XiongZhihang XuLonghai ZhangChangsheng ChenChao XuTai-Sing WuYun-Liang SooZhiming CuiMolly Meng-Jung LiYe Zhu
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Unraveling the catalyst surface structure and behavior during reactions is essential for both mechanistic understanding and performance optimization. Here we report a phenomenon of facet-dependent surface restructuring intrinsic to β-Ni(OH) 2 catalysts during oxygen evolution reaction (OER), discovered by the correlative ex situ and operando characterization. The ex situ study after OER reveals β-Ni(OH) 2 restructuring at the edge facets to form nanoporous Ni 1- x O, which is Ni deficient containing Ni 3+ species. Operando liquid transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Raman spectroscopy further identify the active role of the intermediate β-NiOOH phase in both the OER catalysis and Ni 1 -x O formation, pinpointing the complete surface restructuring pathway. Such surface restructuring is shown to effectively increase the exposed active sites, accelerate Ni oxidation kinetics, and optimize *OH intermediate bonding energy toward fast OER kinetics, which leads to an extraordinary activity enhancement of ∼16-fold. Facilitated by such a self-activation process, the specially prepared β-Ni(OH) 2 with larger edge facets exhibits a 470-fold current enhancement than that of the benchmark IrO 2 , demonstrating a promising way to optimize metal-(oxy)hydroxide-based catalysts.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • transition metal
  • raman spectroscopy
  • highly efficient
  • ionic liquid
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • room temperature
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