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Cited 31 time in webofscience Cited 35 time in scopus
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Atomic layers of ruthenium oxide coupled with Mo2TiC2Tx MXene for exceptionally high catalytic activity toward water oxidationopen access

Authors
Tiwari, Jitendra N.Umer, MuhammadBhaskaran, GokulUmer, SohaibLee, GeunsikKim, Min GyuLee, Han-KooKumar, KrishanVilian, A. T. EzhilHuh, Yun SukHan, Young-Kyu
Issue Date
Dec-2023
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Mo2TiC2Tx MXene; Ruthenium oxide; Density functional theory; Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations; Oxygen evolution reaction; Water splitting
Citation
Applied Catalysis B: Environment and Energy, v.339, pp 1 - 11
Pages
11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Applied Catalysis B: Environment and Energy
Volume
339
Start Page
1
End Page
11
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/25866
DOI
10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.123139
ISSN
0926-3373
1873-3883
Abstract
Progress in acidic water splitting has remained limited because of low oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activities, sluggish reaction kinetics, and severe catalyst degradation. Thus, a highly active and durable OER catalyst is required for the commercialization of acidic water electrolyzers. Here, we report t-phase ruthenium oxide atomic layers implanted on Mo2TiC2Tx MXene (RAL-M) as a model electrocatalyst for the OER in acidic media, which exhibits a remarkable mass activity (6.2 A mg- 1), excellent turnover frequency (TOF; 2.4 s-1), and negligible loss of durability after 22 h in a two-electrode cell configuration. The mass activity and TOF of RAL-M are 150 times (RuO2-Premetek Co.) and 540 times (RuO2-Sigma-Aldrich) greater than the industrially adopted electrocatalysts at pH 0.48. Computational calculations show that the ruthenium active sites of RAL-M have a strong affinity to oxygen species (e.g., OH*, O*, and OOH*), which efficiently adapts water dissociation and favors both the adsorbate evolution and lattice oxygen mechanistic pathways to accelerate the OER.
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