Abstract
Tuning the electroactive surface species of electrocatalysts remains a significant challenge for achieving highly efficient oxygen evolution reactions. Herein, we propose an innovative in situ leaching strategy, modulated by cationic oxidation, to achieve active self-reconstruction of these catalysts. Vanadium is introduced as a cation into Ni3S2 and oxidized under low oxidative potential, leading to subsequent leaching into the electrolyte and triggering self-reconstruction. The structural evolution from V-Ni3S2 to Ni(OH)2 and subsequently to NiOOH is identified by operando Raman as a three-step transition. In contrast, V-free Ni3S2 is unable to bypass the thermodynamically predicted nickel oxysulfide products to transform into active NiOOH. As a result, the self-restructured V-Ni3S2 only needs an ultralow overpotential of 155 mV at 10 mA cm-2, outperforming V-free Ni3S2 and many other advanced catalysts. This work provides new guidelines for manipulating in situ leaching to modulate the self-reconstruction of catalysts.
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