Metal Coordination Determines the Catalytic Activity of IrO2 Nanoparticles for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction

16 February 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

H2 production through water electrolysis is a promising strategy for storing sunlight energy. For the oxygen evolution reaction, iridium oxide containing materials are state-of-the-art due to their stability in acidic conditions. Moreover, precious metal content can be reduced by using small nanoparticles that show high catalytic activities. We performed DFT calculations on a 1.2 nm large IrO2 Wulff-like stoichiometric nanoparticle model (IrO2) with the aim of determining the factors controlling the catalytic activity of IrO2 nanoparticles. Results show that at reaction conditions tetra- and tricoordinated iridium centers are not fully oxidized, the major species being IrO(OH) and IrO(OH)2, respectively. Moreover, the computed overpotentials show that low coordinated iridium centers are more active than the pentacoordinates sites of the well-defined facets. These low coordination sites are likely more abundant on amorphous nanoparticles, which could be one of the factors explaining the higher catalytic activity observed for non-crystalline materials.

Keywords

water electrolysis
oxygen evolution reaction
DFT
iridium oxide
nanoparticles

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Materials for the "Metal Coordination Determines the Catalytic Activity of IrO2 Nanoparticles for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction" manuscript
Description
The supplementary material includes the Gibbs energies of all structures considered in the oxidation process as function of the applied potential, the reaction Gibbs energies associated to the PCET steps of the site oxidation as function of the applied potential, the reaction Gibbs energies of all OER reaction mechanisms considered in this work and the Schemes defining these OER reaction mechanisms.
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