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Undesired Bulk Oxidation of LiMn 2 O 4 Increases Overpotential of Electrocatalytic Water Oxidation in Lithium Hydroxide Electrolytes
Author(s) -
Baumung Max,
Kollenbach Leon,
Xi Lifei,
Risch Marcel
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chemphyschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.016
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1439-7641
pISSN - 1439-4235
DOI - 10.1002/cphc.201900601
Subject(s) - overpotential , inorganic chemistry , x ray absorption spectroscopy , chemistry , electrolyte , oxygen evolution , redox , electrocatalyst , manganese , hydroxide , electrochemistry , electrode , absorption spectroscopy , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Chemical and structural changes preceding electrocatalysis obfuscate the nature of the active state of electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), which calls for model systems to gain systematic insight. We investigated the effect of bulk oxidation on the overpotential of ink‐casted LiMn 2 O 4 electrodes by a rotating ring‐disk electrode (RRDE) setup and X‐ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the K shell core level of manganese ions (Mn−K edge). The cyclic voltammogram of the RRDE disk shows pronounced redox peaks in lithium hydroxide electrolytes with pH between 12 and 13.5, which we assign to bulk manganese redox based on XAS. The onset of the OER is pH‐dependent on the scale of the reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) with a Nernst slope of −40(4) mV/pH at −5 μA monitored at the RRDE ring. To connect this trend to catalyst changes, we develop a simple model for delithiation of LiMn 2 O 4 in LiOH electrolytes, which gives the same Nernst slope of delithiation as our experimental data, i. e., 116(25) mV/pH. From this data, we construct an E RHE ‐pH diagram that illustrates robustness of LiMn 2 O 4 against oxidation above pH 13.5 as also verified by XAS. We conclude that manganese oxidation is the origin of the increase of the OER overpotential at pH lower than 14 and also of the pH dependence on the RHE scale. Our work highlights that vulnerability to transition metal redox may lead to increased overpotentials, which is important for the design of stable electrocatalysts.

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