Constructing an Adaptive Heterojunction as a Highly Active Catalyst for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction
Xiao Ren, Chao Wei, Yuanmiao Sun, Xiaozhi Liu, Fanqi Meng, Xiaoxia Meng, Shengnan Sun, Shibo Xi, Yonghua Du, Zhuanfang Bi, Guangyi Shang, Adrian C. Fisher, Lin Gu, Zhichuan J. Xu
Abstract
Abstract Electrochemical water splitting is of prime importance to green energy technology. Particularly, the reaction at the anode side, namely the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), requires a high overpotential associated with OO bond formation, which dominates the energy‐efficiency of the whole process. Activating the anionic redox chemistry of oxygen in metal oxides, which involves the formation of superoxo/peroxo‐like (O 2 ) n − , commonly occurs in most highly active catalysts during the OER process. In this study, a highly active catalyst is designed: electrochemically delithiated LiNiO 2 , which facilitates the formation of superoxo/peroxo‐like (O 2 ) n − species, i.e., NiOO*, for enhancing OER activity. The OER‐induced surface reconstruction builds an adaptive heterojunction, where NiOOH grows on delithiated LiNiO 2 (delithiated‐LiNiO 2 /NiOOH). At this junction, the lithium vacancies within the delithiated LiNiO 2 optimize the electronic structure of the surface NiOOH to form stable NiOO* species, which enables better OER activity. This finding provides new insight for designing highly active catalysts with stable superoxo‐like/peroxo‐like (O 2 ) n − for water oxidation.