JOURNAL ARTICLE

Amorphous Cobalt Vanadium Oxide as a Highly Active Electrocatalyst for Oxygen Evolution

Laurent LiardetXile Hu

Year: 2017 Journal:   ACS Catalysis Vol: 8 (1)Pages: 644-650   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

The water-splitting reaction provides a promising mechanism to store renewable energies in the form of hydrogen fuel. The oxidation half-reaction, the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), is a complex four-electron process that constitutes an efficiency bottleneck in water splitting. Here we report a highly active OER catalyst, cobalt vanadium oxide. The catalyst is designed on the basis of a volcano plot of metal-OH bond strength and activity. The catalyst can be synthesized by a facile hydrothermal route. The most active pure-phase material (a-CoVO x ) is X-ray amorphous and provides a 10 mA cm-2 current density at an overpotential of 347 mV in 1 M KOH electrolyte when immobilized on a flat substrate. The synthetic method can also be applied to coat a high-surface-area substrate such as nickel foam. On this three-dimensional substrate, the a-CoVO x catalyst is highly active, reaching 10 mA cm-2 at 254 mV overpotential, with a Tafel slope of only 35 mV dec-1. This work demonstrates a-CoVO x as a promising electrocatalyst for oxygen evolution and validates M-OH bond strength as a practical descriptor in OER catalysis.

Keywords:
Overpotential Oxygen evolution Tafel equation Electrocatalyst Catalysis Water splitting Materials science Inorganic chemistry Cobalt Chemical engineering Vanadium oxide Substrate (aquarium) Chemistry Vanadium Electrochemistry Physical chemistry Electrode Organic chemistry

Metrics

270
Cited By
7.77
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
32
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Advanced battery technologies research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Electrochemical Analysis and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Electrochemistry
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.