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Stable seawater oxidation with a self-healing oxygen-evolving catalyst

Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers, ISSN: 2052-1553, Vol: 10, Issue: 10, Page: 3103-3111
2023
  • 11
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 8
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    11
    • Citation Indexes
      11
  • Captures
    8
  • Mentions
    1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • 1

Most Recent News

Study Data from Zhengzhou University Provide New Insights into Chemicals and Chemistry (Stable Seawater Oxidation With a Self-healing Oxygen-evolving Catalyst)

2023 JUN 05 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Chemicals & Chemistry Daily Daily -- Data detailed on Chemicals and Chemistry have

Article Description

Direct seawater electrolysis is key to massive hydrogen fuel production without the depletion of precious freshwater resources and the need for high-purity electrolytes. However, the presence of high-concentration chloride ions (Cl) and alkaline-earth metal ions (Mg, Ca) poses great challenges to the stability and selectivity of the catalysts for seawater splitting. Here, we demonstrate a self-healing oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalyst for long-term seawater electrolysis. By suppressing the competitive chlorine evolution reaction and precipitating the alkaline-earth metal ions through an alkaline treatment of the seawater, stable seawater oxidation is achieved owing to the self-healing ability of the borate-intercalated nickel-cobalt-iron oxyhydroxides (NiCoFe-B) OER catalyst under highly-alkaline conditions. The self-healing NiCoFe-B catalyst achieves stable seawater oxidation at a large current density of 500 mA cm for 1000 h with near unity Faraday efficiency. Our results have demonstrated strong durability and high OER selectivity of the self-healing catalyst under harsh conditions, paving the way for industrial large-scale seawater electrolysis.

Bibliographic Details

Xiaojian Zhang; Yi Fan Han; Chao Feng; Zeyu Fan; Beibei Zhang; Yanbo Li; Yequan Xiao; Andraž Mavrič; Nadiia Pastukhova; Matjaz Valant

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Chemistry

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