Abstract
Electrochemical water splitting with a proton-exchange
membrane electrolyte provides many advantages for the energy-efficient
production of high-purity H2 in a sustainable manner, but the
current technology relies on high loadings of expensive and scarce iridium at
the anodes, which are also often unstable in operation. To address this, the
present work scrutinises the electrocatalytic properties of a range of mixed
antimony-metal (Co, Mn, Ni, Fe, Ru) oxides synthesised as thin films by a
simple solution-based method for the oxygen evolution reaction in aqueous 0.5 M
H2SO4. Among the noble-metal free catalysts,
cobalt-antimony and manganese-antimony oxides demonstrate good stability over
24 h and reasonable activity at 24 ± 2 °C, but slowly lose their initial
activity at elevated temperatures. The ruthenium-antimony system is highly
active, requiring an overpotential of only 0.39 ± 0.03 and 0.34 ± 0.01 V to achieve
10 mA cm-2 at 24 ± 2 and 80 °C, respectively, and most importantly,
remaining remarkably stable during one-week tests at 80 °C. Detailed
characterisation reveals that the enhanced stability of metal-antimony oxides
water oxidation catalysts can arise from two distinct structural scenarios:
either formation of a new antimonate phase, or nanoscale intermixing of metal
and antimony oxide crystallites. Density functional theory analysis further
indicates that the stability in operation is supported by the enhanced
hybridisation of the oxygen p- and metal d-orbitals induced by the presence of
Sb.
Supplementary materials
Title
Luke at al - Supplementary Information
Description
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