Nature Communications (Apr 2023)

Unusual double ligand holes as catalytic active sites in LiNiO2

  • Haoliang Huang,
  • Yu-Chung Chang,
  • Yu-Cheng Huang,
  • Lili Li,
  • Alexander C. Komarek,
  • Liu Hao Tjeng,
  • Yuki Orikasa,
  • Chih-Wen Pao,
  • Ting-Shan Chan,
  • Jin-Ming Chen,
  • Shu-Chih Haw,
  • Jing Zhou,
  • Yifeng Wang,
  • Hong-Ji Lin,
  • Chien-Te Chen,
  • Chung-Li Dong,
  • Chang-Yang Kuo,
  • Jian-Qiang Wang,
  • Zhiwei Hu,
  • Linjuan Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37775-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Designing efficient catalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is of importance for energy conversion devices. The anionic redox allows formation of O-O bonds and offers higher OER activity than the conventional metal sites. Here, we successfully prepare LiNiO2 with a dominant 3d 8 L configuration (L is a hole at O 2p) under high oxygen pressure, and achieve a double ligand holes 3d 8 L 2 under OER since one electron removal occurs at O 2p orbitals for NiIII oxides. LiNiO2 exhibits super-efficient OER activity among LiMO2, RMO3 (M = transition metal, R = rare earth) and other unary 3d catalysts. Multiple in situ/operando spectroscopies reveal NiIII→NiIV transition together with Li-removal during OER. Our theory indicates that NiIV (3d 8 L 2) leads to direct O-O coupling between lattice oxygen and *O intermediates accelerating the OER activity. These findings highlight a new way to design the lattice oxygen redox with enough ligand holes created in OER process.