Non-covalent ligand-oxide interaction promotes oxygen evolution

被引:0
作者
Qianbao Wu
Junwu Liang
Mengjun Xiao
Chang Long
Lei Li
Zhenhua Zeng
Andraž Mavrič
Xia Zheng
Jing Zhu
Hai-Wei Liang
Hongfei Liu
Matjaz Valant
Wei Wang
Zhengxing Lv
Jiong Li
Chunhua Cui
机构
[1] University of Electronic Science and Technology of China,Molecular Electrochemistry Laboratory, Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Sciences
[2] Yulin Normal University,Optoelectronic Information Research Center, School of Physics and Telecommunication Engineering
[3] Purdue University,Davidson School of Chemical Engineering
[4] University of Nova Gorica,Materials Research Laboratory
[5] University of Science and Technology of China,Department of Chemical Physics, School of Chemistry and Materials Science
[6] University of Science and Technology of China,Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, Department of Chemistry
[7] University of Electronic Science and Technology of China,School of Materials and Energy
[8] Shanghai Advanced Research Institute,Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility
[9] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
Nature Communications | / 14卷
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摘要
Strategies to generate high-valence metal species capable of oxidizing water often employ composition and coordination tuning of oxide-based catalysts, where strong covalent interactions with metal sites are crucial. However, it remains unexplored whether a relatively weak “non-bonding” interaction between ligands and oxides can mediate the electronic states of metal sites in oxides. Here we present an unusual non-covalent phenanthroline-CoO2 interaction that substantially elevates the population of Co4+ sites for improved water oxidation. We find that phenanthroline only coordinates with Co2+ forming soluble Co(phenanthroline)2(OH)2 complex in alkaline electrolytes, which can be deposited as amorphous CoOxHy film containing non-bonding phenanthroline upon oxidation of Co2+ to Co3+/4+. This in situ deposited catalyst demonstrates a low overpotential of 216 mV at 10 mA cm−2 and sustainable activity over 1600 h with Faradaic efficiency above 97%. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the presence of phenanthroline can stabilize CoO2 through the non-covalent interaction and generate polaron-like electronic states at the Co-Co center.
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