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Cytomembrane‐Structure‐Inspired Active Ni–N–O Interface for Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction
Author(s) -
Huang Jianwen,
Sun Yinghui,
Du Xinchuan,
Zhang Yadong,
Wu Chunyang,
Yan Chaoyi,
Yan Yichao,
Zou Guifu,
Wu Wenqi,
Lu Ruifeng,
Li Yanrong,
Xiong Jie
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201803367
Subject(s) - oxygen evolution , electrocatalyst , catalysis , materials science , non blocking i/o , water splitting , electrochemistry , amorphous solid , hydroxide , chemical engineering , electrolyte , microstructure , density functional theory , nanoparticle , oxygen , nanotechnology , chemical physics , electrode , chemistry , crystallography , computational chemistry , metallurgy , biochemistry , photocatalysis , engineering , organic chemistry
Surface/interface design is one of the most significant and promising motivations to develop high‐performance catalysts for electrolytic water splitting. Here, the nature of cytomembrane having the most effective and functional surface structure is mimicked to fabricate a new configuration of Ni–N–O porous interface nanoparticles (NiNO INPs) with strongly interacting nanointerface between the Ni 3 N and NiO domains, for enhancing the electrocatalytic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) performance. The combination of transmission electron microscopy and electrochemical investigations, tracking the correlation between microstructure evolution and catalytic activity, demonstrate the strongly coupled nanointerface for an approximately sixfold improvement of electrolytic efficiency. Density functional theory simulates the electrocatalytic process with a maximum of 85% reduction of the energy barrier. Further investigations find that the real active site for the OER in the NiNO INPs is the strongly coupled Ni–N–O nanointerface, not the derived amorphous hydroxide, during the OER process. The determination of the correlation of constructed nanointerface with catalytic properties suggests a significant strategy toward the rational design of catalysts for efficient water electrocatalysis.
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