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Materials Engineering in Perovskite for Optimized Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysis in Alkaline Condition
Author(s) -
Dong Feifei,
Li Lu,
Kong Ziqi,
Xu Xiaomin,
Zhang Yaping,
Gao Zhenghui,
Dongyang Biaokui,
Ni Meng,
Liu Quanbing,
Lin Zhan
Publication year - 2021
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.202006638
Subject(s) - oxygen evolution , electrocatalyst , tafel equation , overpotential , perovskite (structure) , materials science , water splitting , anode , electrochemistry , chemical engineering , cathode , alkaline fuel cell , nickel , catalysis , inorganic chemistry , chemistry , electrode , metallurgy , biochemistry , photocatalysis , electrolyte , engineering
Developing robust and highly efficient electrocatalysts for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is critical for renewable, secure, and emission‐free energy technologies. Perovskite Ba 0.5 Sr 0.5 Co 0.8 Fe 0.2 O 3‐δ (BSCF) has emerged as a promising OER electrocatalyst with desirable intrinsic activity. Inspired by the factor that substituting in transition‐metal sublattice of the perovskite can further optimize the OER activity, herein, nickel‐substituted BSCF is adopted, that is, Ba 0.5 Sr 0.5 Co 0.8‐ x Fe 0.2 Ni x O 3‐δ ( x = 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, denoted as BSCFN x , x = 5, 10, 20, respectively), as efficient and stable OER catalysts in alkaline solution. The phase structure, microchemistry, oxygen vacancy, and electrochemical activity of such samples are well‐investigated. Endowed with an overpotential of only 278 mV at 10 mA cm −2 and a Tafel slope of merely 47.98 mV dec −1 , BSCFN20 exhibits the optimum OER activity. When constructing a two‐electrode cell with BSCFN20 as anode and Pt/C as cathode (BSCFN20||Pt/C) for water splitting, it only requires a voltage of 1.63 V to achieve 50 mA cm −2 , and the BSCFN20||Pt/C remains stable within 80 h at 10 mA cm −2 , superior to the state‐of‐the‐art RuO 2 ||Pt/C counterpart. This work provides a feasible strategy for designing stable and highly active perovskite electrocatalysts for future energy storage and conversion.