| Literature DB >> 30673269 |
Jiajian Gao1, Cong-Qiao Xu2, Sung-Fu Hung3, Wei Liu4, Weizheng Cai1, Zhiping Zeng1, Chunmiao Jia1, Hao Ming Chen3, Hai Xiao2, Jun Li2,5, Yanqiang Huang4, Bin Liu1.
Abstract
Oxygen electrochemistry plays a critical role in clean energy technologies such as fuel cells and electrolyzers, but the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) severely restricts the efficiency of these devices due to its slow kinetics. Here, we show that via incorporation of lithium ion into iridium oxide, the thus obtained amorphous iridium oxide (Li-IrO x) demonstrates outstanding water oxidation activity with an OER current density of 10 mA/cm2 at 270 mV overpotential for 10 h of continuous operation in acidic electrolyte. DFT calculations show that lithium incorporation into iridium oxide is able to lower the activation barrier for OER. X-ray absorption characterizations indicate that both amorphous Li-IrO x and rutile IrO2 own similar [IrO6] octahedron units but have different [IrO6] octahedron connection modes. Oxidation of iridium to higher oxidation states along with shrinkage in the Ir-O bond was observed by in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy on amorphous Li-IrO x, but not on rutile IrO2 under OER operando conditions. The much more "flexible" disordered [IrO6] octahedrons with higher oxidation states in amorphous Li-IrO x as compared to the periodically interconnected "rigid" [IrO6] octahedrons in crystalline IrO2 are able to act as more electrophilic centers and thus effectively promote the fast turnover of water oxidation.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30673269 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b11456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419