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Strontium Substituted SmNiO3: Novel Electrode Materials for Alkaline Water Electrolysis
Author(s) -
Reena Parihar,
Priya Sharma,
Amritpal Singh Chaddha,
Narendra Kumar Singh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of new materials for electrochemical systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.496
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1480-2430
pISSN - 1480-2422
DOI - 10.14447/jnmes.v24i3.a08
Subject(s) - tafel equation , oxygen evolution , cyclic voltammetry , inorganic chemistry , electrochemistry , perovskite (structure) , polarization (electrochemistry) , electrolysis , chemistry , oxide , redox , alkaline water electrolysis , materials science , analytical chemistry (journal) , electrode , crystallography , organic chemistry , chromatography , electrolyte
Sr-substituted SmNiO3 perovskite-type oxides have been investigated for their electrocatalytic properties towards oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline medium. Materials were obtained by using low temperature malic acid sol-gel route. To know the redox behaviour, electrocatalytic activity and thermodynamic parameters of oxides, cyclic voltammetry (CV) and anodic polarization curve (Tafel plot) were recorded in 1 M KOH at 25 ºC. X-ray diffraction (XRD) study indicates the formation of almost pure perovskite phase of the material. A pair of redox peaks was observed (anodic; Epa = 494±12 mV and corresponding cathodic; Epc = 360±4 mV) in the potential region 0.0-0.7 V prior to onset of OER. As observed in the case of La-based perovskite oxides, Sr-substitutions in the SmNiO3 also enhance the electrocatalytic properties of the material. However, Sm-based oxides showed least electrocatalytic activity as compared to La-based oxides. The estimated values of Tafel slope and reaction order indicate that each oxide electrode, except SmNiO3, follows similar mechanistic path towards OER. Standard entropy of activation (DS˚#), standard enthalpy of activation (DH˚#) and standard electrochemical energy of activation (DHel˚#) was determined by recording the anodic polarization curve in 1M KOH at different temperatures.

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