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Correlative operando microscopy of oxygen evolution electrocatalysts
Ist Teil von
Nature (London), 2021-05, Vol.593 (7857), p.67-73
Ort / Verlag
London: Nature Publishing Group UK
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Transition metal (oxy)hydroxides are promising electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction
1
–
3
. The properties of these materials evolve dynamically and heterogeneously
4
with applied voltage through ion insertion redox reactions, converting materials that are inactive under open circuit conditions into active electrocatalysts during operation
5
. The catalytic state is thus inherently far from equilibrium, which complicates its direct observation. Here, using a suite of correlative operando scanning probe and X-ray microscopy techniques, we establish a link between the oxygen evolution activity and the local operational chemical, physical and electronic nanoscale structure of single-crystalline β-Co(OH)
2
platelet particles. At pre-catalytic voltages, the particles swell to form an α-CoO
2
H
1.5·
0.5H
2
O-like structure—produced through hydroxide intercalation—in which the oxidation state of cobalt is +2.5. Upon increasing the voltage to drive oxygen evolution, interlayer water and protons de-intercalate to form contracted β-CoOOH particles that contain Co
3+
species. Although these transformations manifest heterogeneously through the bulk of the particles, the electrochemical current is primarily restricted to their edge facets. The observed Tafel behaviour is correlated with the local concentration of Co
3+
at these reactive edge sites, demonstrating the link between bulk ion-insertion and surface catalytic activity.
Mapping the operational chemical, physical and electronic structure of an oxygen evolution electrocatalyst at the nanoscale links the properties of the material with the observed oxygen evolution activity.