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Ru–Cu Nanoheterostructures for Efficient Hydrogen Evolution Reaction in Alkaline Water Electrolyzers

[Image: see text] Combining multiple species working in tandem for different hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) steps is an effective strategy to design HER electrocatalysts. Here, we engineered a hierarchical electrode for the HER composed of amorphous-TiO(2)/Cu nanorods (NRs) decorated with cost-ef...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zuo, Yong, Bellani, Sebastiano, Saleh, Gabriele, Ferri, Michele, Shinde, Dipak V., Zappia, Marilena Isabella, Buha, Joka, Brescia, Rosaria, Prato, Mirko, Pascazio, Roberta, Annamalai, Abinaya, de Souza, Danilo Oliveira, De Trizio, Luca, Infante, Ivan, Bonaccorso, Francesco, Manna, Liberato
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10557145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37747924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c06726
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Combining multiple species working in tandem for different hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) steps is an effective strategy to design HER electrocatalysts. Here, we engineered a hierarchical electrode for the HER composed of amorphous-TiO(2)/Cu nanorods (NRs) decorated with cost-effective Ru–Cu nanoheterostructures (Ru mass loading = 52 μg/cm(2)). Such an electrode exhibits a stable, over 250 h, low overpotential of 74 mV at −200 mA/cm(2) for the HER in 1 M NaOH. The high activity of the electrode is attributed, by structural analysis, operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and first-principles simulations, to synergistic functionalities: (1) mechanically robust, vertically aligned Cu NRs with high electrical conductivity and porosity provide fast charge and gas transfer channels; (2) the Ru electronic structure, regulated by the size of Cu clusters at the surface, facilitates the water dissociation (Volmer step); (3) the Cu clusters grown atop Ru exhibit a close-to-zero Gibbs free energy of the hydrogen adsorption, promoting fast Heyrovsky/Tafel steps. An alkaline electrolyzer (AEL) coupling the proposed cathode and a stainless-steel anode can stably operate in both continuous (1 A/cm(2) for over 200 h) and intermittent modes (accelerated stress tests). A techno-economic analysis predicts the minimal overall hydrogen production cost of US$2.12/kg in a 1 MW AEL plant of 30 year lifetime based on our AEL single cell, hitting the worldwide targets (US$2–2.5/kg(H(2))).