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Cited 2 time in webofscience Cited 2 time in scopus
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Unveiling the pH-universal hydrogen evolution ability of SnS/NiFe2O4 heterostructure electrocatalyst

Authors
John, G.Sree, Vijaya GopalanNavaneethan, M.Jesuraj, P. Justin
Issue Date
Apr-2025
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Nickel ferric oxide; Tin (II) sulfide; Hydrogen evolution reaction; pH-universal; Interfacial Sn-O bond; Overall water splitting
Citation
Applied Surface Science, v.687, pp 1 - 11
Pages
11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Applied Surface Science
Volume
687
Start Page
1
End Page
11
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/57625
DOI
10.1016/j.apsusc.2025.162324
ISSN
0169-4332
1873-5584
Abstract
Utilizing an electrocatalyst proficient in executing the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) across various pH holds promise for developing efficient electrolysers. To harness the supreme capabilities of ternary transition metal oxides and sulfides in HER, electrodes composed of either nickel ferric oxide (NiFe2O4), copper ferric oxide, cobalt ferric oxide were fabricated as substratum with tin sulfide (SnS) superstratum using the hydro- thermal method. Among them, the binder-free SnS/NiFe2O4 electrocatalyst demonstrated enriched surface morphology and electrochemical active sites, resulting in reduced overpotentials for HER under alkaline (68 mV @ 10 mA/cm2) and acidic conditions (35 mV @10 mA/cm2). Furthermore, SnS/NiFe2O4 has demonstrated a cell voltage of 1.48 V (@10 mA/cm2) while deployed it as cathode in an overall water splitting cell under alkaline medium. The performances of SnS/NiFe2O4 are further supported by oxygen vacancies encompassed by the creation of Sn-O bonds at SnS/NiFe2O4 interface. The enhanced electron transfer towards superstratum in SnS/ NiFe2O4 is helped in lowering H+ adsorption energies favouring efficient HER activity across pH-universal conditions. Additionally, the presence of the interfacial Sn-O bonds played a key role in stabilizing the structure and the corresponding catalyst showed a reduced current degradation rate in Chronoamperometry tests, as confirmed by post-XPS analysis.
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