Recently, defect engineering has been used to intruduce half‐metallicity into selected semiconductors, thereby significantly enhancing their electrical conductivity and catalytic/electrocatalytic performance. Taking inspiration from this, we developed a novel bifunctional electrode consisting of two monolayer thick manganese dioxide (δ‐MnO2) nanosheet arrays on a nickel foam, using a novel in‐situ method. The bifunctional electrode exposes numerous active sites for electrocatalytic rections and displays excellent electrical conductivity, resulting in strong performance for both HER and OER. Based on detailed structure analysis and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, the remarkably OER and HER activity of the bifunctional electrode can be attributed to the ultrathin δ‐MnO2 nanosheets containing abundant oxygen vacancies lead to the formation od Mn3+ active sites, which give rise to half‐metallicity properties and strong H2O adsorption. This synthetic strategy introduced here represents a new method for the development of non‐precious metal Mn‐based electrocatalysts for eddicient energy conversion.
Lithium‐rich manganese‐based layered oxides show great potential as high‐capacity cathode materials for lithium ion batteries, but usually exhibit a poor cycle life, gradual voltage drop during cycling, and low thermal stability in the highly delithiated state. Herein, a strategy to promote the electrochemical performance of this material by manipulating the electronic structure through incorporation of boracic polyanions is developed. As‐prepared Li[Li0.2Ni0.13Co0.13Mn0.54](BO4)0.015(BO3)0.005O1.925 shows a decreased M‐O covalency and a lowered O 2p band top compared with pristine Li[Li0.2Ni0.13Co0.13Mn0.54]O2. As a result, the modified cathode exhibits a superior reversible capacity of 300 mA h g−1 after 80 cycles, excellent cycling stability with a capacity retention of 89% within 300 cycles, higher thermal stability, and enhanced redox couple potentials. The improvements are correlated to the enhanced oxygen stability that originates from the tuned electronic structure. This facile strategy may further be extended to other high capacity electrode systems.
Enhancement of the semiconductor-molecule interaction, in particular, promoting the interfacial charge transfer process (ICTP), is key to improving the sensitivity of semiconductor-based surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). Herein, by developing amorphous ZnO nanocages (a-ZnO NCs), we successfully obtained an ultrahigh enhancement factor of up to 6.62×10 . This remarkable SERS sensitivity can be attributed to high-efficiency ICTP within a-ZnO NC molecule system, which is caused by metastable electronic states of a-ZnO NCs. First-principles density functional theory (DFT) simulations further confirmed a stronger ICTP in a-ZnO NCs than in their crystalline counterparts. The efficient ICTP can even generate π bonding in Zn-S bonds peculiar to the mercapto molecule adsorbed a-ZnO NCs, which has been verified through the X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) characterization. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time such remarkable SERS activity has been observed within amorphous semiconductor nanomaterials, which could open a new frontier for developing highly sensitive and stable SERS technology.
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