4.8 Article

A Polyimide Nanolayer as a Metal-Free and Durable Organic Electrode Toward Highly Efficient Oxygen Evolution

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 57, Issue 38, Pages 12563-12566

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.201808036

Keywords

energy transducers; metal-free electrocatalysts; oxygen evolution reaction; polymer electrodes; water splitting

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21722103, 21720102002, 21673140]
  2. Shanghai Basic Research Program [16JC1401600]
  3. SJTU-MPI partner group
  4. Shanghai Eastern Scholar Program
  5. Shanghai Rising-Star Program [16QA1402100]

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The exploitation of metal-free organic polymers as electrodes for water splitting reactions is limited by their presumably low activity and poor stability, especially for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) under more critical conditions. Now, the thickness of a cheap and robust polymer, poly(p-phenylene pyromellitimide) (PPPI) was rationally engineered by an insitu polymerization method to make the metal-free polymer available for the first time as flexible, tailorable, efficient, and ultra-stable electrodes for water oxidation over a wide pH range. The PPPI electrode with an optimized thickness of about 200nm provided a current density of 32.8 mA cm(-2) at an overpotential of 510 mV in 0.1mol L-1 KOH, which is even higher than that (31.5 mA cm(-2)) of commercial IrO2 OER catalyst. The PPPI electrodes are scalable and stable, maintaining 92% of its activity after a 48-h chronoamperometric stability test.

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