Constructing an Adaptive Heterojunction as a Highly Active Catalyst for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction
Article 2020 en
Authors
XR
Xiao Ren
CW
Chao Wei
YS
Yuanmiao Sun
Abstract
1 min read
Electrochemical water splitting is of prime importance to green energy technology. Particularly, the reaction at the anode side, namely the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), requires a high overpotential associated with OO bond formation, which dominates the energy-efficiency of the whole process. Activating the anionic redox chemistry of oxygen in metal oxides, which involves the formation of superoxo/peroxo-like (O<sub>2</sub> )<sup>n</sup> <sup>-</sup> , commonly occurs in most highly active catalysts during the OER process. In this study, a highly active catalyst is designed: electrochemically delithiated LiNiO<sub>2</sub> , which facilitates the formation of superoxo/peroxo-like (O<sub>2</sub> )<sup>n</sup> <sup>-</sup> species, i.e., NiOO*, for enhancing OER activity. The OER-induced surface reconstruction builds an adaptive heterojunction, where NiOOH grows on delithiated LiNiO<sub>2</sub> (delithiated-LiNiO<sub>2</sub> /NiOOH). At this junction, the lithium vacancies within the delithiated LiNiO<sub>2</sub> optimize the electronic structure of the surface NiOOH to form stable NiOO* species, which enables better OER activity. This finding provides new insight for designing highly active catalysts with stable superoxo-like/peroxo-like (O<sub>2</sub> )<sup>n</sup> <sup>-</sup> for water oxidation.
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