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Unlocking the Potential of Mechanochemical Coupling: Boosting the Oxygen Evolution Reaction by Mating Proton Acceptors with Electron Donors
Author(s) -
Curcio Antonino,
Wang Jian,
Wang Zheng,
Zhang Zhiqi,
Belotti Alessio,
Pepe Simona,
Effat Mohammed B.,
Shao Zongping,
Lim Jongwoo,
Ciucci Francesco
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.202008077
Subject(s) - oxygen evolution , materials science , perovskite (structure) , electron transfer , proton , tafel equation , chemical physics , deprotonation , water splitting , chemical engineering , catalysis , nanotechnology , photochemistry , chemistry , ion , photocatalysis , electrochemistry , electrode , physics , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry , engineering , biochemistry
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is the bottleneck of many sustainable energy conversion systems, including water splitting technologies. The kinetics of the OER is generally sluggish unless precious metal‐based catalysts are used. Perovskite oxides have shown promise as alternatives to these expensive materials. However, for several perovskites, including SrCoO 3 −δ , the rate‐limiting step is proton‐transfer. In this study, it is shown that such a kinetic limitation can be overcome by coupling those perovskites with MoS 2 mechanochemically. By studying composites of SrMO 3−δ (M = Co, Fe, Ti) and MoS 2 , the role that the formed heterointerfaces play in enhancing the activity is investigated. Mechanochemically mating SrCoO 3−δ and MoS 2 increases the mass activity toward OER by a factor of ten and led to a Tafel slope of only 37 mV dec −1 . In contrast, combining MoS 2 with SrFeO 3−δ or SrTiO 3−δ , two materials whose OER is not limited by proton‐transfer, does not result in an improvement of the performance. The experimental measurements and first‐principle calculations reveal that the MoS 2 at the MoS 2 @SrCoO 3−δ heterointerfaces is both an electron and a proton acceptor, thereby facilitating deprotonation of the perovskite and resulting in faster OER kinetics.