Enhanced Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Phosphorus‐Rich Tungsten Phosphide by Cobalt Doping: A Comprehensive Study of the Active Sites and Electronic Structure — Yixuan Yang (2021) | RDL Network
Enhanced Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Phosphorus‐Rich Tungsten Phosphide by Cobalt Doping: A Comprehensive Study of the Active Sites and Electronic Structure
Article 2021 en
Authors
YY
Yixuan Yang
XF
Xiaoyu Feng
ZL
Zhizhong Liu
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract Phosphorus‐rich transition metal phosphides (TMPs) are considered efficient electrocatalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the actual activity of P‐rich TMPs is not as good as expected because of the undesirable electronic structure. Transition metal doping has been shown to be effective in improving the HER activity of TMPs in both acid and alkaline media, but the underlying mechanism is ambiguous, especially for P‐rich TMPs. Herein, cobalt‐doped and phosphorus‐rich tungsten phosphide nanowire arrays (Co/WP 2 NWs/CC) are synthesized and the electrochemical properties and mechanism are determined by both experiments and theoretical calculation. The results reveal that Co dopants serve as inert catalytic sites and do not participate in HER process, but the Co/WP 2 NWs/CC exhibits enhanced electrocatalytic activity as a result of the lower water dissociation barrier and hydrogen adsorption/desorption free energy on W or P sites and improved conductivity by strong electron‐donating effects of Co dopants, thereby boosting the catalytic activity and kinetics.
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