Litcius/Paper detail

Distorted octahedral sites drive early formation and stabilisation of nickel oxyhydroxides in trimetallic nickel–iron–molybdenum oxides

Mouna Rafei, Alexis Piñeiro‐García, Xiuyu Wu, Elena Puentes-Prado, Tuğçe Üstünel, Stephan Appelfeller, Thomas Wågberg, Eduardo Gracia‐Espino

2025Communications Materials9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Trimetallic nickel–iron–molybdenum oxides are excellent electrocatalysts for alkaline water electrolysis despite experiencing severe molybdenum dissolution. While the impact of molybdenum on fresh samples is well-understood, its substantial loss during operation without compromising performance presents a unique puzzle. Here, we show that the initial presence of molybdenum induces the formation of nickel vacancies and distorts octahedral nickel sites. This structural distortion induces charge transfer between lattice oxygen and nickel, inducing an early formation and stabilization of active nickel oxyhydroxides. Even after complete molybdenum leaching and transitioning into a bimetallic nickel-iron oxide, the catalyst retains its exceptional performance due to the persistence of distorted octahedral nickel sites. Understanding this process enables the exploration of alternative metals that could induce similar structural distortions, as well as inspire similar strategies in other electrocatalysts.

Topics & Concepts

NickelMolybdenumOctahedronMaterials scienceInorganic chemistryMetallurgyChemistryCrystallographyCrystal structureTransition Metal Oxide NanomaterialsElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCatalytic Processes in Materials Science