Solar-driven, highly sustained splitting of seawater into hydrogen and oxygen fuelsYun Kuang, Michael J. Kenney, Yongtao Meng et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2019 Significance Electrolysis of water to generate hydrogen fuel could be vital to the future renewable energy landscape. Electrodes that can sustain seawater splitting without chloride corrosion could address the issue of freshwater scarcity on Earth. Herein, a hierarchical anode consisting of a nickel–iron hydroxide electrocatalyst layer uniformly coated on a sulfide layer formed on Ni substrate was developed, affording superior catalytic activity and corrosion resistance in seawater electrolysis. In situ-generated polyanion-rich passivating layers formed in the anode are responsible for chloride repelling and high corrosion resistance, leading to new directions for designing and fabricating highly sustained seawater-splitting electrodes and providing an opportunity to use the vast seawater on Earth as an energy carrier.
High-Performance Silicon Photoanodes Passivated with Ultrathin Nickel Films for Water OxidationSilicon's sensitivity to corrosion has hindered its use in photoanode applications. We found that deposition of a ~2-nanometer nickel film on n-type silicon (n-Si) with its native oxide affords a high-performance metal-insulator-semiconductor photoanode for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water oxidation in both aqueous potassium hydroxide (KOH, pH = 14) and aqueous borate buffer (pH = 9.5) solutions. The Ni film acted as a surface protection layer against corrosion and as a nonprecious metal electrocatalyst for oxygen evolution. In 1 M aqueous KOH, the Ni/n-Si photoanodes exhibited high PEC activity with a low onset potential (~1.07 volts versus reversible hydrogen electrode), high photocurrent density, and durability. The electrode showed no sign of decay after ~80 hours of continuous PEC water oxidation in a mixed lithium borate-potassium borate electrolyte. The high photovoltage was attributed to a high built-in potential in a metal-insulator-semiconductor-like device with an ultrathin, incomplete screening Ni/NiO(x) layer from the electrolyte.
Blending Cr<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> into a NiO–Ni Electrocatalyst for Sustained Water SplittingMing Gong, Wu Zhou, Michael J. Kenney et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2015 The rising H2 economy demands active and durable electrocatalysts based on low-cost, earth-abundant materials for water electrolysis/photolysis. Here we report nanoscale Ni metal cores over-coated by a Cr2 O3 -blended NiO layer synthesized on metallic foam substrates. The Ni@NiO/Cr2 O3 triphase material exhibits superior activity and stability similar to Pt for the hydrogen-evolution reaction in basic solutions. The chemically stable Cr2 O3 is crucial for preventing oxidation of the Ni core, maintaining abundant NiO/Ni interfaces as catalytically active sites in the heterostructure and thus imparting high stability to the hydrogen-evolution catalyst. The highly active and stable electrocatalyst enables an alkaline electrolyzer operating at 20 mA cm(-2) at a voltage lower than 1.5 V, lasting longer than 3 weeks without decay. The non-precious metal catalysts afford a high efficiency of about 15 % for light-driven water splitting using GaAs solar cells.
From Pablo to OsamaMichael J. Kenney|Penn State University Press eBooks|2007 Highly active oxygen evolution integrated with efficient CO <sub>2</sub> to CO electroreductionYongtao Meng, Xiao Zhang, Wei‐Hsuan Hung et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2019 Significance Electrochemical reduction of CO 2 to useful chemicals or fuels is critical to closing the carbon cycle and preventing further deterioration of the environment/climate. This work addresses the low-energy-efficiency problem of CO 2 reduction limited by sluggish oxygen evolution reaction (OER) on the anode side. The only active OER catalysts for coupling CO 2 reduction in neutral conditions are based on noble metals such as Ir, Ru, and gold. Herein, we developed a nonprecious-metal-based OER anode with higher activity and stability than those based on noble-metal catalysts IrO 2 and Ir/C. We integrated our anode with a selective CO 2 reduction cathode to achieve >97% conversion of CO 2 to CO and a record-setting high energy efficiency for CO 2 conversion.