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Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination

Given the limited access to freshwater compared to seawater, a growing interest surrounds the direct seawater electrolysis to produce hydrogen. However, we currently lack efficient electrocatalysts to selectively perform the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) over the oxidation of the chloride ions tha...

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Autores principales: Hajjar, Perla, Lacour, Marie-Agnès, Masquelez, Nathalie, Cambedouzou, Julien, Tingry, Sophie, Cornu, David, Holade, Yaovi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8512141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34641469
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26195926
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author Hajjar, Perla
Lacour, Marie-Agnès
Masquelez, Nathalie
Cambedouzou, Julien
Tingry, Sophie
Cornu, David
Holade, Yaovi
author_facet Hajjar, Perla
Lacour, Marie-Agnès
Masquelez, Nathalie
Cambedouzou, Julien
Tingry, Sophie
Cornu, David
Holade, Yaovi
author_sort Hajjar, Perla
collection PubMed
description Given the limited access to freshwater compared to seawater, a growing interest surrounds the direct seawater electrolysis to produce hydrogen. However, we currently lack efficient electrocatalysts to selectively perform the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) over the oxidation of the chloride ions that are the main components of seawater. In this contribution, we report an engineering strategy to synthesize heterogeneous electrocatalysts by the simultaneous formation of separate chalcogenides of nickel (NiS(x), x = 0, 2/3, 8/9, and 4/3) and cobalt (CoS(x), x = 0 and 8/9) onto a carbon-nitrogen-sulfur nanostructured network. Specifically, the oxidative aniline polymerization in the presence of metallic cations was combined with the calcination to regulate the separate formation of various self-supported phases in order to target the multifunctional applicability as both hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and OER in a simulated alkaline seawater. The OER’s metric current densities of 10 and 100 mA cm(−2) were achieved at the bimetallic for only 1.60 and 1.63 V(RHE), respectively. This high-performance was maintained in the electrolysis with a starting voltage of 1.6 V and satisfactory stability at 100 mA over 17 h. Our findings validate a high selectivity for OER of ~100%, which outperforms the previously reported data of 87–95%.
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spelling pubmed-85121412021-10-14 Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination Hajjar, Perla Lacour, Marie-Agnès Masquelez, Nathalie Cambedouzou, Julien Tingry, Sophie Cornu, David Holade, Yaovi Molecules Article Given the limited access to freshwater compared to seawater, a growing interest surrounds the direct seawater electrolysis to produce hydrogen. However, we currently lack efficient electrocatalysts to selectively perform the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) over the oxidation of the chloride ions that are the main components of seawater. In this contribution, we report an engineering strategy to synthesize heterogeneous electrocatalysts by the simultaneous formation of separate chalcogenides of nickel (NiS(x), x = 0, 2/3, 8/9, and 4/3) and cobalt (CoS(x), x = 0 and 8/9) onto a carbon-nitrogen-sulfur nanostructured network. Specifically, the oxidative aniline polymerization in the presence of metallic cations was combined with the calcination to regulate the separate formation of various self-supported phases in order to target the multifunctional applicability as both hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and OER in a simulated alkaline seawater. The OER’s metric current densities of 10 and 100 mA cm(−2) were achieved at the bimetallic for only 1.60 and 1.63 V(RHE), respectively. This high-performance was maintained in the electrolysis with a starting voltage of 1.6 V and satisfactory stability at 100 mA over 17 h. Our findings validate a high selectivity for OER of ~100%, which outperforms the previously reported data of 87–95%. MDPI 2021-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8512141/ /pubmed/34641469 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26195926 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hajjar, Perla
Lacour, Marie-Agnès
Masquelez, Nathalie
Cambedouzou, Julien
Tingry, Sophie
Cornu, David
Holade, Yaovi
Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title_full Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title_fullStr Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title_full_unstemmed Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title_short Insights on the Electrocatalytic Seawater Splitting at Heterogeneous Nickel-Cobalt Based Electrocatalysts Engineered from Oxidative Aniline Polymerization and Calcination
title_sort insights on the electrocatalytic seawater splitting at heterogeneous nickel-cobalt based electrocatalysts engineered from oxidative aniline polymerization and calcination
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8512141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34641469
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26195926
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