Suppression of Oxygen Vacancies in Rutile Ruo<sub>2</sub> via In Situ Exsolution for Enhanced Water Electrocatalysis
Yudi Zhang, Yan Wang, Wen Sun, Dandan Ma, Jinfu Ma, Jiancun Rao, Qiunan Xu, Juntao Huo, Jian Liu, Guowei Li
Abstract
Abstract Elemental vacancies are proposed as an effective approach to tuning the electronic structure of catalysts that are critical for energy conversion. However, for reactions such as the sluggish oxygen evolution reaction, the excess of oxygen vacancies (V O ) is inevitable and detrimental to catalysts’ electrochemical stability and activities, e.g., in the most active RuO 2 . While significant work is carried out to hinder the formation of V O , the development of a fast and efficient strategy is limited. Herein, a protection SrO layer produced successfully at the surface of RuO 2 with the in situ exsolution method with perovskite SrRuO 3 as the precatalyst, which could significantly hinder the generation of V O . Benefited from the suppression of V O , the surface‐modified RuO 2 requires a low overpotential of 290 mV at 100 mA cm −2 , accompanied by remarkably high electrochemical stability (100 h) and Faraday efficiency (≈100%). Theoretical investigation reveals that the formation energy of V O in RuO 2 is almost doubled in the exsolved RuO 2 phase as a result of the weakened RuO bond covalency. This work not only provides insight into the structural evolution of perovskite oxide catalysts but also demonstrates the feasibility of controlling vacancy formation via in situ exsolution.