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Ba–Ni–Ge Clathrate Transformation Maximizes Active Site Utilization of Nickel for Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Performance
Author(s) -
Chen Ziliang,
Yang Hongyuan,
Hausmann J. Niklas,
Mebs Stefan,
Hlukhyy Viktor,
Dau Holger,
Driess Matthias,
Menezes Prashanth W.
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.202424743
Subject(s) - oxygen evolution , nickel , electrochemistry , raman spectroscopy , materials science , electrolysis of water , catalysis , chemical engineering , ternary operation , water splitting , electrolysis , x ray absorption spectroscopy , redox , clathrate hydrate , nanostructure , phase (matter) , oxygen storage , inorganic chemistry , chemistry , nanotechnology , absorption spectroscopy , hydrate , metallurgy , electrode , organic chemistry , engineering , electrolyte , computer science , optics , photocatalysis , quantum mechanics , programming language , physics
Abstract Discovering novel oxygen evolution reaction (OER) (pre)catalysts with exceptional catalytic activity and long‐term stability is pivotal for advancing decarbonization technologies. In this study, we present the ternary Ba 8 Ni 6 Ge 40 phase with an open clathrate structure exhibiting remarkable performance in alkaline OER. When integrated into an alkaline water electrolyzer, this clathrate precatalyst achieves high stability under a sustained current density of ∼550 mA cm −2 for 10 days. By combining in situ Raman spectroscopy, quasi in situ X‐ray absorption spectroscopy, and (micro)structural characterizations, we elucidate the complete electrochemical transformation of Ba 8 Ni 6 Ge 40 (~90 weight% leaching) forming ultrathin nanosheets composed of a porous and defective NiOOH nanostructure with maximized accessible active site exposure. Notably, a reversible phase transition mainly between Ni(OH) 2 and NiOOH has also been established in the electrochemical redox process. Meanwhile, the successful application of the model Ba 8 Ni 6 Ge 40 precatalyst represents a promising new class of functional inorganic materials for water electrolysis.

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