Blending Cr<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> into a NiO–Ni Electrocatalyst for Sustained Water Splitting

Ming Gong(Stanford University), Wu Zhou(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Michael J. Kenney(Stanford University), Rich Kapusta, Sam Cowley, Yingpeng Wu(Stanford University), Bingan Lu(Hunan University), Meng‐Chang Lin(Industrial Technology Research Institute), Di‐Yan Wang(National Taiwan Normal University), Yang Jiang(Stanford University), Bing‐Joe Hwang(National Taiwan University of Science and Technology), Hongjie Dai(Stanford Medicine)
Angewandte Chemie International Edition
August 24, 2015
Cited by 213Open Access
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Abstract

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.


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