In
hydrogen production, the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER)
limits the energy conversion efficiency and also impacts stability
in proton-exchange membrane water electrolyzers. Widely used Ir-based
catalysts suffer from insufficient activity, while more active Ru-based
catalysts tend to dissolve under OER conditions. This has been associated
with the participation of lattice oxygen (lattice oxygen oxidation
mechanism (LOM)), which may lead to the collapse of the crystal structure
and accelerate the leaching of active Ru species, leading to low operating
stability. Here we develop Sr–Ru–Ir ternary oxide electrocatalysts
that achieve high OER activity and stability in acidic electrolyte.
The catalysts achieve an overpotential of 190 mV at 10 mA cm–2 and the overpotential remains below 225 mV following 1,500 h of
operation. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and 18O isotope-labeled
online mass spectroscopy studies reveal that the participation of
lattice oxygen during OER was suppressed by interactions in the Ru–O–Ir
local structure, offering a picture of how stability was improved.
The electronic structure of active Ru sites was modulated by Sr and
Ir, optimizing the binding energetics of OER oxo-intermediates.
In lead–halide perovskites, antibonding states at the valence band maximum (VBM)—the result of Pb 6s-I 5p coupling—enable defect-tolerant properties; however, questions surrounding stability, and a reliance on lead, remain challenges for perovskite solar cells. Here, we report that binary GeSe has a perovskite-like antibonding VBM arising from Ge 4s-Se 4p coupling; and that it exhibits similarly shallow bulk defects combined with high stability. We find that the deep defect density in bulk GeSe is ~1012 cm−3. We devise therefore a surface passivation strategy, and find that the resulting GeSe solar cells achieve a certified power conversion efficiency of 5.2%, 3.7 times higher than the best previously-reported GeSe photovoltaics. Unencapsulated devices show no efficiency loss after 12 months of storage in ambient conditions; 1100 hours under maximum power point tracking; a total ultraviolet irradiation dosage of 15 kWh m−2; and 60 thermal cycles from −40 to 85 °C.
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