4.6 Article

Organic-inorganic hybrids of Fe-Co polyphenolic network wrapped Fe3O4 nanocatalysts for significantly enhanced oxygen evolution

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 7, Issue 23, Pages 14302-14308

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9ta03339d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51502062, 51702067, 51572060, 51671074]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2017T100239, 2016M590279]
  3. Northern Illinois University

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The design of organic-inorganic hybrid nanostructures with carefully balanced properties is a promising approach for constructing advanced electrocatalysts using earth abundant elements. Here we describe hybrid electrocatalysts that have strongly coupled metal (Co-Fe) polyphenolic networks (MPNs) and Fe3O4 nanoparticles for catalyzing the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) with exceptional activity. These catalysts were produced by a tannic acid (TA) mediated conversion process that selectively converts the surface layers of pre-synthesized zeolitic imidazole framework-67 (ZIF-67)@Fe3O4 core-shell nanoparticles to uniformly wrapped organic MPN layers. The MPN layers are composed of metal-phenolic complexes that are rich in molecular metal hydro(oxy)oxide (M-OH, M-O-M) centers that not only increase the electrochemical surface area by approximately four times but also serve as highly active sites for the OER. As a result of the structural and compositional benefits, the hybrid catalysts only require an overpotential of 260 mV to produce oxygen at 10 mA cm(-2) and have a Tafel slope of only 33.6 mV dec(-1) in alkaline electrolytes, which are the lowest when compared with pristine ZIF-67@Fe3O4, Fe3O4 and the benchmark IrO2 catalysts.

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