1. Intrinsic Electrocatalytic Activity for Oxygen Evolution of Crystalline 3d‐Transition Metal Layered Double Hydroxides
- Author
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Manuel Gliech, Thomas Merzdorf, Lujin Pan, Jeffrey Greeley, Peter Strasser, Hannes Sarodnik, Zhenhua Zeng, Jing Zhu, Wei-Xue Li, and Fabio Dionigi
- Subjects
Oxygen Evolution Reaction | Hot Paper ,Materials science ,electrochemical surface area ,engineering.material ,010402 general chemistry ,Electrochemistry ,water splitting ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Transition metal ,Hydrothermal synthesis ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,Research Articles ,010405 organic chemistry ,Layered double hydroxides ,Oxygen evolution ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,layered double hydroxides ,0104 chemical sciences ,hydrothermal synthesis ,Chemical engineering ,oxygen evolution reaction ,engineering ,Water splitting ,Research Article - Abstract
Layered double hydroxides (LDHs) are among the most active and studied catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline electrolytes. However, previous studies have generally either focused on a small number of LDHs, applied synthetic routes with limited structural control, or used non‐intrinsic activity metrics, thus hampering the construction of consistent structure–activity‐relations. Herein, by employing new individually developed synthesis strategies with atomic structural control, we obtained a broad series of crystalline α‐MA(II)MB(III) LDH and β‐MA(OH)2 electrocatalysts (MA=Ni, Co, and MB=Co, Fe, Mn). We further derived their intrinsic activity through electrochemical active surface area normalization, yielding the trend NiFe LDH > CoFe LDH > Fe‐free Co‐containing catalysts > Fe‐Co‐free Ni‐based catalysts. Our theoretical reactivity analysis revealed that these intrinsic activity trends originate from the dual‐metal‐site nature of the reaction centers, which lead to composition‐dependent synergies and diverse scaling relationships that may be used to design catalysts with improved performance., Catalytic activities for oxygen evolution on crystalline 3d transition metal layered double hydroxides are derived using electrochemical surface area based normalization. Density functional calculations reveal a dual‐metal‐site feature of the reaction centers that provides opportunities to design new catalysts with improved performance.
- Published
- 2021