Chemical etching induced microporous nickel backbones decorated with metallic Fe@hydroxide nanocatalysts: an efficient and sustainable OER anode toward industrial alkaline water-splittingopen access
- Authors
- Shrestha, Nabeen K.; Patil, Supriya A.; Han, Jonghoon; Cho, Sangeun; Inamdar, Akbar I.; Kim, Hyungsang; Im, Hyunsik
- Issue Date
- Apr-2022
- Publisher
- Royal Society of Chemistry
- Keywords
- Alkalinity; Chlorine Compounds; Cost Effectiveness; Electrocatalysts; Electrodes; Electrolytes; Fossil Fuels; Iron Compounds; Microporosity; Nickel Compounds; Potassium Hydroxide; Alkaline Water; Cell Voltages; Chemical Etching; Cost Effective; Hydrogen Energy; Metallics; Microporous; Nano-catalyst; Nickel Foam; Water Splitting; Etching
- Citation
- Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.10, no.16, pp 8989 - 9000
- Pages
- 12
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Materials Chemistry A
- Volume
- 10
- Number
- 16
- Start Page
- 8989
- End Page
- 9000
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/3271
- DOI
- 10.1039/d1ta10103j
- ISSN
- 2050-7488
2050-7496
- Abstract
- Development of cost-effective and highly efficient electrocatalysts for water splitting is crucial to produce affordable and sustainable green-hydrogen energy that can alleviate the current overreliance on fossil fuels. This work demonstrates the simple immersion-based chemical etching of nickel foam (NF) in an ethanolic FeCl3 solution to generate microporous nickel (Ni) backbones decorated with hierarchically structured metallic Fe doped Ni-Fe-hydroxide nanoparticles serving as a highly promising oxygen evolution reaction (OER) electrode in alkaline water. The optimally etched NF-based OER electrode exhibits a low Tafel slope of 47.3 mV dec(-1) and a low overpotential of 220, 270, and 310 mV at 10, 100, and 500 mA cm(-2), respectively. Intriguingly, this electrode also exhibits a perfectly reversible OER and HER performance between +400 and -40 mA cm(-2) with no evidence of electrode potential decay for 80 h. Importantly, when used with an industrial-type 30 wt% KOH aqueous electrolyte and compared to a benchmark Pt/C(20wt%)||IrO2-based cell, the electrolyzer exhibits a lower cell voltage of 1.52 (vs. 1.56 V of Pt/C(20wt%)||IrO2-cell), 1.62 (vs. 1.79), 1.69 (vs. 1.92) and 1.79 (vs. 2.08) V at 10, 50, 100, and 240 mA cm(-2), respectively, with the cell voltage maintained for similar to 100 h.
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Collections - College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > ETC > 1. Journal Articles
- College of Natural Science > Department of Physics > 1. Journal Articles
- College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > Division of System Semiconductor > 1. Journal Articles

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