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A hierarchically porous nickel-copper phosphide nano-foam for efficient electrochemical splitting of water

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Wei, Li
Goh, Kunli
Karahan, H. Enis
Chang, Jian
Zhai, Shengli
Chen, Xuncai
Chen, Yuan

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Abstract

Electrochemical splitting of water to produce oxygen (O-2) and hydrogen (H-2) through a cathodic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and an anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a promising green approach for sustainable energy supply. Here we demonstrated a porous nickel-copper phosphide (NiCuP) nano-foam as a bifunctional electrocatalyst for highly efficient total water splitting. Prepared from a bubble-templated electrodeposition method and subsequent low-temperature phosphidization, NiCuP has a hierarchical pore structure with a large electrochemical active surface area. To reach a high current density of 50 mA cm(-2), it requires merely 146 and 300 mV with small Tafel slopes of 47 and 49 mV dec(-1) for HER and OER, respectively. The total water splitting test using NiCuP as both the anode and cathode showed nearly 100% Faradic efficiency and surpassed the performances of electrode pairs using commercial Pt/C and IrO2 catalysts under our test conditions. The high activity of NiCuP can be attributed to (1) the conductive NiCu substrates, (2) a large electrochemically active surface area together with a combination of pores of different sizes, and (3) the formation of active Ni/Cu oxides/hydroxides while keeping a portion of more conductive Ni/Cu phosphides in the nano-foam. We expect the current catalyst to enable the manufacturing of affordable water splitting systems.

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Royal Soc Chemistry

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Chemistry, multidisciplinary, Nanoscience, Nanotechnology, Materials science, Multidisciplinary, Physics, applied

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Nanoscale

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10.1039/c6nr09864a

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07 - Affordable and Clean Energy
Renewable energy solutions are becoming cheaper, more reliable and more efficient every day.Our current reliance on fossil fuels is unsustainable and harmful to the planet, which is why we have to change the way we produce and consume energy. Implementing these new energy solutions as fast as possible is essential to counter climate change, one of the biggest threats to our own survival.

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