Science and Technology of Advanced Materials (Oct 2024)

Bi-metallic Electrochemical Deposition on 3D pyrolytic carbon architectures for potential application in hydrogen evolution reaction

  • Prince Kumar Rai,
  • Amritanshu Singh,
  • Shashwat Bishwanathan,
  • Prashant Kumar Gupta,
  • De-Yi Wang,
  • Monsur Islam,
  • Ankur Gupta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14686996.2024.2421740

Abstract

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3D printing has emerged as a highly efficient process for fabricating electrodes in hydrogen evolution through water splitting, whereas metals are the most popular choice of materials in hydrogen evolution reactions (HER) due to their catalytic activity. However Current 3D printing solutions face challenges, including high cost, low surface area, and sub-optimal performance. In this work, we introduce metal-deposited 3D printed pyrolytic carbon (PyC) as a facile and cost-effective HER electrode. We adopt an integrated approach of resin 3D printing, pyrolysis, and electrochemical metal deposition. 3D printing of a resin and its subsequent pyrolysis led to 3D complex architectures of the conductive substrate, facilitating the electrochemical metal deposition and leading to layered 3D metal architecture. Both monolayers of metals (such as copper and nickel), and bi-metallic 3D PyC structures are demonstrated. Each metal layer thickness ranges from 6 to10 µm. The metal coatings, particularly the bi-metallic configurations, result in achieving significantly higher mechanical properties under compressive loading and improved electrical properties due to the synergistic contributions from each metal counterpart. The metalized PyC structures are further demonstrated for HER catalysts, contributing to developing highly efficient and durable catalyst systems for hydrogen production. Among the materials studied here, Ni@Cu bimetallic 3D PyC electrodes are particularly well-suited, demonstrating low HER overpotential value 264 mV (100 mA/cm2, KOH (1 M)) with corresponding Tafel slopes of 107 mV/dec, with exceptional stability during a 10 h operation at a high applied current of -50 mA/cm2.

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