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Tuning the Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Co2NiO4 via Precursor-Controlled Synthesisopen access

Authors
Ahmed, Abu Talha AqueelMujtaba, Momin M.Ahmed, Kafeel Ahmed TufailAnsari, Abu SaadCho, SangeunLee, YoungminLee, SejoonSekar, Sankar
Issue Date
Feb-2026
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
electrocatalysts; hydrogen evolution reaction; Co2NiO4; turnover frequency; morphology variation
Citation
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, v.27, no.3, pp 1 - 18
Pages
18
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume
27
Number
3
Start Page
1
End Page
18
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63780
DOI
10.3390/ijms27031584
ISSN
1661-6596
1422-0067
Abstract
The realization of efficient and durable earth-abundant electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is critical for scalable hydrogen production, yet remains limited by insufficient intrinsic activity. Herein, we demonstrate a precursor-controlled hydrothermal strategy that enables precise morphology and surface-state regulation of spinel Co2NiO4 directly grown on nickel foam, allowing a clear correlation between catalyst architecture and HER performance. By replacing urea with hexamethylenetetramine, an ultrathin, highly interconnected two-dimensional nanosheet network (CNO-HT) is obtained, which promotes efficient electron transport, rapid electrolyte penetration, and maximized exposure of catalytically active sites. Structural and spectroscopic analyses confirm the formation of phase-pure cubic Co2NiO4 with enriched mixed-valence Ni and Co species, favoring enhanced redox activity. The CNO-HT catalyst exhibits a low overpotential (86 mV at 10 mA cm(-2)) and a smaller Tafel slope (103 mV dec(-1)), significantly outperforming the urea-derived counterpart. Importantly, the catalyst maintains stable HER operation for 96 h at both 10 and 100 mA cm(-2), with post-stability electrochemical analyses confirming preserved kinetics and interfacial properties. This work establishes precursor-regulated nanosheet engineering as general and scalable strategy to unlock the intrinsic catalytic potential of spinel metal oxides, offering actionable design principles for next-generation non-noble electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen production.
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