High-entropy materials has gained extensive attention owing to their unique structural characteristics and outstanding properties. The synthesis of high-entropy compounds, especially high-entropy metal phosphides have been seldom reported because of...
Hollow silica spheres (HSS) with special interior spaces, high specific surface area and excellent adsorption and permeability performance were synthesized via micelle-template method using cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) micelles as soft template and tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) as silica precursor. SEM, TEM, FT-IR, XRD, DLS and BET-BJH were carried out to characterize the morphology and structure of as-obtained samples. The results demonstrated that the samples were amorphous with a hollow structure and huge specific surface area. The growth of HSS was an inward-growth mechanism along template. Notably, we have provided a new and interesting fundamental principle for HSS materials by precisely controlling the ethanol-to-water volume ratio. In addition, the as-obtained HSS were mixed with waterborne polyurethane (WPU) to prepare WPU/HSS composite membrane. Various characterizations (SEM, TEM, FT-IR and TGA) revealed the morphology, polydispersity and adherence between HSS and WPU. Performance tests showed that the introduction of HSS can improve the water vapor permeability of composite membrane, promoting its water resistance and mechanical performance at the same time.
Exploring
cost-effective and general approaches for highly active and stable
bifunctional transition metal phosphide (TMP) electrocatalysts towards
overall water splitting is greatly desirable and challenging. Herein,
a general strategy combining sol–gel and a carbonization-assisted
route was proposed to facilely fabricate a series of TMP nanoparticles,
including CoP, MoP, FeP, Cu2P, Ni2P, PtP2, FeNiP, CoNiP, and FeCoNiP, coupled in an amorphous carbon
matrix with one-step carbon composite formation. The resultant NiFeP@C
exhibits excellent activities as a bifunctional electrocatalyst toward
oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER)
with low overpotentials of 260 and 160 mV, respectively, at 10 mA/cm2 in 1 M KOH solution. With the NiFeP@C electrocatalyst as
both electrode materials, an integrated electrolyzer can deliver 47.0
mA/cm2 of current density at 1.60 V, better than the assembled
Pt/C20∥IrO2 counterpart. The encapsulation of NiFeP
nanoparticles in the carbon matrix effectively prevents their corrosion
and leads to almost unfading catalytic activities for more than 20
h for either the HER, OER, or overall water splitting, outperforming
recently reported bifunctional electrocatalysts. The coexistence of
Ni, Fe, P, and C would have synergetic effects to accelerate charge
transfer and promote electrocatalytic activity. This universal strategy
for TMP-based composites opens up a new avenue to explore TMPs as
multifunctional materials for various applications.
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