Highly Electroactive Ni Pyrophosphate/Pt Catalyst toward Hydrogen Evolution Reaction

Robust electrocatalysts toward the resourceful and sustainable generation of hydrogen by splitting of water via electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) are a prerequisite to realize high-efficiency energy research. Highly electroactive catalysts for hydrogen production with ultralow loadi...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2019-02, Vol.11 (5), p.4969-4982
Hauptverfasser: Theerthagiri, Jayaraman, Cardoso, Eduardo S. F, Fortunato, Guilherme V, Casagrande, Gleison A, Senthilkumar, Baskar, Madhavan, Jagannathan, Maia, Gilberto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Robust electrocatalysts toward the resourceful and sustainable generation of hydrogen by splitting of water via electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) are a prerequisite to realize high-efficiency energy research. Highly electroactive catalysts for hydrogen production with ultralow loading of platinum (Pt) have been under exhaustive exploration to make them cutting-edge and cost-effectively reasonable for water splitting. Herein, we report the synthesis of hierarchically structured nickel pyrophosphate (β-Ni2P2O7) by a precipitation method and nickel phosphate (Ni3(PO4)2) by two different synthetic routes, namely, simple cost-effective precipitation and solution combustion processes. Thereafter, Pt-decorated nickel pyrophosphate and nickel phosphate (β-Ni2P2O7/Pt and Ni3(PO4)2/Pt) were prepared by using potassium hexachloroplatinate and ascorbic acid. The fabricated novel nickel pyrophosphate and nickel phosphate/Pt materials were utilized as potential and affordable electrocatalysts for HER by water splitting. The detailed electrochemical studies revealed that the β-Ni2P2O7/Pt (1 μg·cm–2 Pt) electrocatalyst showed excellent electrocatalytic performances for HER in acidic solution with an overpotential of 28 mV at −10 mA·cm–2, a Tafel slope of 32 mV·dec, and an exchange current density (j 0) of −1.31 mA·cm–2, which were close to the values obtained using the Vulcan/Pt (8.0 μg·cm–2 Pt), commercial benchmarking electrocatalyst with eight times higher Pt amount. Furthermore, the β-Ni2P2O7/Pt electrocatalyst maintains an excellent stability for over −0.1 V versus RHE for 12 days, keeping j 0 equal after the stability test (−1.28 mA cm–2). Very well-distributed Pt NPs inside the “cages” on the β-Ni2P2O7 structure with a crystalline pattern of 0.67 nm distance to the Ni2P2O7/Pt electrocatalyst, helping the Volmer–Tafel mechanism with the Tafel reaction as a major rate-limiting step, help to liberate very fast the Pt sites after HER. The high electrocatalytic performance and remarkable durability showed the β-Ni2P2O7/Pt material to be a promising cost-effective electrocatalyst for hydrogen production.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.8b18153