JOURNAL ARTICLE

Construction of CoNiFe Trimetallic Carbonate Hydroxide Hierarchical Hollow Microflowers with Oxygen Vacancies for Electrocatalytic Water Oxidation

Abstract

Abstract It is of great challenge to design transition multimetallic carbonate hydroxides with delicate hollow features and defects for efficient electrolytic oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Here, a sequential self‐templating method to synthesize CoNiFe trimetallic carbonate hydroxide hierarchical hollow microflowers (CN‐xFe HMs) with oxygen vacancies (V O ) is reported. The synergistic merits of hollow structure, Fe substitution, and V O endow the CN‐xFe HMs with high active‐site exposure density and increased electrical conductivity. Specially, the optimized CN‐xFe HMs validate the excellent OER performance with an overpotential of 258 mV to drive 10 mA cm −2 and a Tafel slope of 48.7 mV dec −1 . Theoretical calculations reveal that Fe substitution and V O can synergistically regulate the electronic states to achieve near‐ideal adsorption/desorption capacity for oxygenated intermediates. Moreover, the successful synthesis of other six metals substituted CoNiM (M = Cu, Zn, Cr, Mo, Er and La) carbonate hydroxides provides a universal protocol to construct transition multimetallic electrocatalysts with hollow structures for gaining highly efficient energy conversion reactions.

Keywords:
Overpotential Tafel equation Materials science Oxygen evolution Hydroxide Chemical engineering Carbonate Electrolyte Transition metal Adsorption Oxygen Inorganic chemistry Catalysis Nanotechnology Electrode Electrochemistry Metallurgy Physical chemistry Chemistry Organic chemistry

Metrics

73
Cited By
4.27
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
99
Refs
0.94
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
Fuel Cells and Related Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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