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Why should transition metal chalcogenides be investigated as water splitting precatalysts even though they transform into (oxyhydr)oxides?

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN ELECTROCHEMISTRY
Volume 34, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coelec.2022.100991

Keywords

Transition metal chalcogenides; Sulphate; selenate; tellurate; Oxygen evolution reaction; Transformation; reconstruction; Role of anions

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [EXC 2008/1-390540038]
  2. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [03EW0015A/B]
  3. Einstein Foundation Berlin/EC2/BIG-NSE

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The extensive investigation of 3d transition metal chalcogenide precatalysts revealed their transformation into (oxyhydr)oxides during oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and possibly hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) conditions. The review discusses the suitability of chalcogenides as sacrificial catalysts and their abundance, low cost, and non-toxicity. The role of chalcogenates in the reconstruction/transformation process and their effect on OER activity and *OH/*OOH scaling relations is also examined.
The extensive investigation of 3d transition metal chalcogenide (sulphides, selenides, tellurides) precatalysts has shown that they transform into (oxyhydr)oxides during the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and likely during industrial hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) conditions, as predicted by their Pourbaix diagrams. The phases formed from chalcogenide precatalysts are often more active, due to anion leaching induced effects. But are chalcogenides suitable to be used sacrificially, are they abundant, cheap, and non-toxic enough? Is their unique chemical nature really required? This review answers these questions by discussing the role of chalcogenides in the reconstruction/transfor mation process. Furthermore, it examines the role of remaining traces of chalcogenates (sulphate, selenate) that were recently shown to improve the OER activity and can break the *OH/*OOH scaling relations.

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