Interfacial Regulation of Rice-Grain-like Iron–Nickel Phosphide Nanorods on Phosphorus-Doped Graphene Architectures as Bifunctional Electrocatalysts for Water Splitting
Xu Yu, Yong Li, Chengang Pei, Zhixin Zhao, Yanhui Lu, Wenfeng Zhou, Donglei Guo, Wenqiang Li, Jung Kyu Kim, Ho Seok Park, Huan Pang
Abstract
The design of bimetallic metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) with a hierarchical structure is important to improve the electrocatalytic performance of catalysts due to their synergistic effect on different metal ions. In this work, the catalyst comprises bimetallic iron–nickel MOF-derived FeNi phosphides, intricately integrated with phosphorus-doped reduced graphene oxide architectures (FeNi 2 P–C/P-rGA) through the hydrothermal and phosphating treatments. The hierarchical architecture of the catalyst is beneficial for exposing active sites and facilitating electron transfer. The FeNi 2 P–C/P-rGA catalyst exhibits excellent performance in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline electrolytes. Notably, FeNi 2 P–C/P-rGA requires only the overpotential of 93 and 210 mV to achieve a current density of 10 mA cm –2 for the HER and OER with small values of Tafel slope and charge transfer resistance, respectively. Furthermore, the catalyst exhibits boosted activity for overall water splitting with a low potential of 1.56 V. This work can be considered to extend the design of multilevel catalysts in the application of water splitting.