Bimetallic-MOF-Derived Amorphous Zinc/Cobalt-Iron-Based Hollow Nanowall Arrays via Ion Exchange for Highly Efficient Oxygen Evolution.

Journal: Small (Weinheim An Der Bergstrasse, Germany)
Published:
Abstract

Oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is critical for optimizing renewable energy systems, including metal-air batteries and water electrolysis. One major challenge for OER is to develop durable and cost-effective electrocatalysts with high catalytic performance. Herein, a controllable ion-exchange method to synthesize amorphous zinc/cobalt-iron hydroxide-based hollow nanowall arrays (A-Zn/Co-Fe HNAs) derived from bimetallic metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) on carbon cloth is reported. The amorphous characteristic enables the presented materials with more electrocatalytic sites and short diffusion paths for rapid access to the electrolyte, achieving efficient charge transfer for OER. The optimized nanostructure of A-Zn/Co-Fe HNAs via tuning the amount of iron sulfate in the reaction solution delivers a low overpotential of 226 mV to reach a current density of 10 mA cm-2 with a small Tafel slope of 37.81 mV dec-1 while exhibiting high durability at varied current densities over 80 h. The remarkable electrochemical performance can be attributed to the synergistic effect from chemical elements of Zn, Co-Fe, and a robust hollow structure. This simple method of fabricating bimetallic-MOF-derived amorphous Zn/Co-Fe HNAs on carbon cloth can be applied as a practical platform for other OER electrocatalysts.

Authors
Zhengxiang Gu, Xuelian Wei, Xiaoqin Zhang, Zhengyu Duan, Zhongwei Gu, Qiyong Gong, Kui Luo