4.8 Article

A High-Entropy Oxide as High-Activity Electrocatalyst for Water Oxidation

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 5329-5339

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c08096

Keywords

high-entropy oxides; water electrolysis; oxygen evolution reaction; perovskite oxide catalysts; green hydrogen; scaling reactions

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High-entropy materials show promise as high-activity catalysts for electrochemical energy storage due to their tunability and multiple potential active sites. This study examines the catalytic activity of high-entropy perovskite oxides (HEOs) for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and finds that HEOs outperform their parent compounds by a factor of 17 to 680. X-ray photoemission studies suggest that simultaneous oxidation and reduction of different transition metal cations contribute to the high activity of HEOs.
High-entropy materials are an emerging pathway in the development of high-activity (electro)catalysts because of the inherent tunability and coexistence of multiple potential active sites, which may lead to earth-abundant catalyst materials for energy-efficient electrochemical energy storage. In this report, we identify how the multication composition in high-entropy perovskite oxides (HEO) contributes to high catalytic activity for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), i.e., the key kinetically limiting half-reaction in several electrochemical energy conversion technologies, including green hydrogen generation. We compare the activity of the (001) facet of LaCr0.2Mn0.2Fe0.2Co0.2Ni0.2O3-delta with the parent compounds (single B-site in the ABO3 perovskite). While the single B-site perovskites roughly follow the expected volcano-type activity trends, the HEO clearly outperforms all of its parent compounds with 17 to 680 times higher currents at a fixed overpotential. As all samples were grown as an epitaxial layer, our results indicate an intrinsic composition-function relationship, avoiding the effects of complex geometries or unknown surface composition. In-depth X-ray photoemission studies reveal a synergistic effect of simultaneous oxidation and reduction of different transition metal cations during the adsorption of reaction intermediates. The surprisingly high OER activity demonstrates that HEOs are a highly attractive, earth-abundant material class for high-activity OER electrocatalysts, possibly allowing the activity to be fine-tuned beyond the scaling limits of mono-or bimetallic oxides.

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