The scalable production of hydrogen could conveniently be realized by alkaline water electrolysis. Currently, the major challenge confronting hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is lacking inexpensive alternatives to platinum-based electrocatalysts. Here we report a high-efficient and stable electrocatalyst composed of ruthenium and cobalt bimetallic nanoalloy encapsulated in nitrogen-doped graphene layers. The catalysts display remarkable performance with low overpotentials of only 28 and 218 mV at 10 and 100 mA cm−2, respectively, and excellent stability of 10,000 cycles. Ruthenium is the cheapest platinum-group metal and its amount in the catalyst is only 3.58 wt.%, showing the catalyst high activity at a very competitive price. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the introduction of ruthenium atoms into cobalt core can improve the efficiency of electron transfer from alloy core to graphene shell, beneficial for enhancing carbon–hydrogen bond, thereby lowing ΔGH* of HER.
Electrochemical
water splitting is considered as the most promising
technology for hydrogen production. Considering overall water splitting
for practical applications, catalysis of the oxygen evolution reaction
(OER) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) should be performed in
the same electrolyte, especially in alkaline solutions. However, designing
and searching for highly active and inexpensive electrocatalysts for
both OER and HER in basic media remain significant challenges. Herein,
we report a facile and universal strategy for synthesizing nonprecious
transition metals, binary alloys, and ternary alloys encapsulated
in graphene layers by direct annealing of metal–organic frameworks.
Density functional theory calculations prove that with an increase
in the degree of freedom of alloys or a change in the metal proportions
in FeCoNi ternary alloys, the electronic structures of materials can
also be tuned intentionally by changing the number of transferred
electrons between alloys and graphene. The optimal material alloys
FeCo and FeCoNi exhibited remarkable catalytic performance for HER
and OER in 1.0 M KOH, reaching a current density of 10 mA cm–2 at low overpotentials of 149 mV for HER and 288 mV for OER. In addition,
as an overall alkaline water electrolysis, they were comparable to
that of the Pt/RuO2 couple, along with long cycling stability.
Graphene, a 2D material consisting of a single layer of sp -hybridized carbon, exhibits inert activity as an electrocatalyst, while the incorporation of heteroatoms (such as N) into the framework can tune its electronic properties. Because of the different electronegativity between N and C atoms, electrons will transfer from C to N in N-doped graphene nanosheets, changing inert C atoms adjacent to the N-dopants into active sites. Notwithstanding the achieved progress, its intrinsic activity in acidic media is still far from Pt/C. Here, a facile annealing strategy is adopted for Ir-doped metal-organic frameworks to synthesize IrCo nanoalloys encapsulated in N-doped graphene layers. The highly active electrocatalyst, with remarkably reduced Ir loading (1.56 wt%), achieves an ultralow Tafel slope of 23 mV dec and an overpotential of only 24 mV at a current density of 10 mA cm in 0.5 m sulfuric acid solution. Such superior performance is even superior to the noble-metal catalyst Pt. Surface structural and computational studies reveal that the superior behavior originates from the decreased ΔG for HER induced by the electrons transferred from the alloy core to the graphene layers, which is beneficial for enhancing CH binding.
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