Abstract
The high cost and low energy efficiency of conventional water electrolysis methods continue to restrict the widespread adoption of green hydrogen. Anion exchange membrane (AEM) water electrolysis is a promising technology that can produce hydrogen using cost-effective transition metal catalysts at high energy efficiency. Herein, we investigate the catalytic activity of nickel and iron nanoparticles dispersed on metal-oxide supports for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), employing electrochemical testing with an anion exchange ionomer to evaluate their potential for application in AEM electrolyzers. We report the electrochemical performance of NiFe nanoparticles of varying Ni:Fe ratios on CeO2 for OER reaction, assessing the overpotential, Tafel slope and electrochemical stability of the catalysts. Our findings indicate that Ni90Fe10 has the highest catalytic activity as well as stability. To further understand the role of different supports, we assess the electrocatalytic performance of Ni90Fe10 nanoparticles on two more supports - TiO2 and ZrO2. While CeO2 has the lowest overpotential, the other supports also show high activity and good performance at high current density. TiO2 exhibits superior stability and its overpotential after chronopotentiometry measurements approaches that of CeO2 at high current densities. These results underscore the critical role of iron addition in enhancing nickel nanoparticles' catalytic activity and further emphasize the importance of metal oxide supports in improving catalyst stability and performance.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information: NiFe on CeO2, TiO2 and ZrO2 Supports as Efficient Oxygen Evolution Reaction Catalysts in Alkaline Media
Description
Table showing FAAS measurements of NiFe/CeO2 samples; additional SEM images of NiFe/CeO2 samples; additional TEM images of Ni90Fe10/CeO2; XPS spectra of Ni75Fe25/CeO2 sample; Fe2p and Ni3p-Fe3p spectra of Ni90Fe10/CeO2, Ni90Fe10/TiO2 and Ni75Fe25/CeO2 samples; overpotential, Tafel slope and charge transfer resistance as a function of Fe content; CV plots of Ni90Fe10/CeO2, Ni90Fe10/TiO2 and Ni90Fe10/ZrO2 and details of uncertainty analysis
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Supplementary weblinks
Title
Data and Plot Scripts: NiFe on CeO2, TiO2 and ZrO2 Supports as Efficient Oxygen Evolution Reaction Catalysts in Alkaline Media
Description
All data used to generate the figures in this manuscript as well as the corresponding analysis and plot scripts are available in the GitHub repository.
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