Small Structures (Aug 2024)
Moderately Reconstructed Ternary Metal Nitride Nanoparticles for Highly Efficient and Robust Freshwater and Seawater Oxidation under Industrial Current Density
Abstract
Transition metal nitrides (TMNs) electrocatalysts experience rapid performance degradation during oxygen evolution reaction (OER) due to severe and irreversible electrochemical reconstruction, impeding their practical application in electrochemical water splitting. To address this issue, ternary metal (Ni, Fe, Cr) nitride nanoparticles on spongy nitrogen‐doped disordered carbon skeleton electrocatalyst (NFCN/C) is synthesized using a novel one‐pot pyrolysis of eutectic mixture method. The ionomer‐free NFCN/C electrode, which undergoes moderate electrochemical reconstruction, demonstrates high OER performance in both alkaline freshwater and seawater solutions, achieving a current density of 250 mA cm−2 with low overpotentials of 349 and 364 mV, respectively. The NFCN/C anode with Pt/C cathode delivers 10 mA cm−2 at a low cell voltage of 1.49 V and exhibits long‐term durability of 450 h at 500 mA cm−2. In situ Raman spectroscopy and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS), along with pre‐ and post‐characterizations, elucidate that both high electrocatalytic activity and robustness of NFCN/C for OER stem from the proposed intrinsic strategy integrating physical and electronic structures. This work paves the way for designing highly efficient and robust TMNs electrocatalysts with moderate electrochemical reconstruction for industrial freshwater and seawater electrolysis.
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