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A High-Entropy Oxide as High-Activity Electrocatalyst for Water Oxidation

[Image: see text] High-entropy materials are an emerging pathway in the development of high-activity (electro)catalysts because of the inherent tunability and coexistence of multiple potential active sites, which may lead to earth-abundant catalyst materials for energy-efficient electrochemical ener...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kante, Mohana V., Weber, Moritz L., Ni, Shu, van den Bosch, Iris C. G., van der Minne, Emma, Heymann, Lisa, Falling, Lorenz J., Gauquelin, Nicolas, Tsvetanova, Martina, Cunha, Daniel M., Koster, Gertjan, Gunkel, Felix, Nemšák, Slavomír, Hahn, Horst, Velasco Estrada, Leonardo, Baeumer, Christoph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10061923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36913300
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c08096
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] High-entropy materials are an emerging pathway in the development of high-activity (electro)catalysts because of the inherent tunability and coexistence of multiple potential active sites, which may lead to earth-abundant catalyst materials for energy-efficient electrochemical energy storage. In this report, we identify how the multication composition in high-entropy perovskite oxides (HEO) contributes to high catalytic activity for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), i.e., the key kinetically limiting half-reaction in several electrochemical energy conversion technologies, including green hydrogen generation. We compare the activity of the (001) facet of LaCr(0.2)Mn(0.2)Fe(0.2)Co(0.2)Ni(0.2)O(3-δ) with the parent compounds (single B-site in the ABO(3) perovskite). While the single B-site perovskites roughly follow the expected volcano-type activity trends, the HEO clearly outperforms all of its parent compounds with 17 to 680 times higher currents at a fixed overpotential. As all samples were grown as an epitaxial layer, our results indicate an intrinsic composition–function relationship, avoiding the effects of complex geometries or unknown surface composition. In-depth X-ray photoemission studies reveal a synergistic effect of simultaneous oxidation and reduction of different transition metal cations during the adsorption of reaction intermediates. The surprisingly high OER activity demonstrates that HEOs are a highly attractive, earth-abundant material class for high-activity OER electrocatalysts, possibly allowing the activity to be fine-tuned beyond the scaling limits of mono- or bimetallic oxides.