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Turning Waste into Treasure: Regulating the Oxygen Corrosion on Fe Foam for Efficient Electrocatalysis
Author(s) -
Liu Xupo,
Gong Mingxing,
Xiao Dongdong,
Deng Shaofeng,
Liang Jianing,
Zhao Tonghui,
Lu Yun,
Shen Tao,
Zhang Jian,
Wang Deli
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.202000663
Subject(s) - corrosion , oxygen evolution , overpotential , materials science , electrocatalyst , water splitting , chemical engineering , aqueous solution , tafel equation , oxygen , chloride , metallurgy , catalysis , inorganic chemistry , electrochemistry , chemistry , electrode , photocatalysis , organic chemistry , engineering
Iron corrosion causes a great damage to the economy due to the function attenuation of iron‐based devices. However, the corrosion products can be used as active materials for some electrocatalytic reactions, such as oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Herein, the oxygen corrosion on Fe foams (FF) to synthesize effective self‐supporting electrocatalysts for OER, leading to “turning waste into treasure,” is regulated. A dual chloride aqueous system of “NaCl‐NiCl 2 ” is employed to tailor the structures and OER properties of corrosion layers. The corrosion behaviors identify that Cl − anions serve as accelerators for oxygen corrosion, while Ni 2+ cations guarantee the uniform growth of corrosion layers owing to the appeared chemical plating. The synergistic effect of “NaCl‐NiCl 2 ” generates one of the highest OER activities that only an overpotential of 212 mV is required to achieve 100 mA cm −2 in 1.0 m KOH solution. The as‐prepared catalyst also exhibits excellent durability over 168 h (one week) at 100 mA cm −2 and promising application for overall water splitting. Specially, a large self‐supporting electrode (9 × 10 cm 2 ) is successfully synthesized via this cost‐effective and easily scale‐up approach. By combining with corrosion science, this work provides a significant stepping stone in exploring high‐performance OER electrocatalysts.