Abstract

The sluggish kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline water electrolysis remains a significant challenge for developing high-efficiency electrocatalytic systems. In this study, we present a three-dimensional, micrometer-sized iridium oxide (IrO2)-decorated cobalt carbonate hydroxide (IrO2-P-CoCH) electrocatalyst, which is engineered in situ on a carbon cloth (CC) substrate pretreated with atmospheric-pressure dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma (PCC). The electrocatalyst features petal-like structures composed of nanosized rods, providing abundant reactive areas and sites, including the oxygen vacancy caused by the air-DBD plasma. As a result, the IrO2-P-CoCH/PCC electrocatalyst demonstrates an outstanding OER performance, with overpotentials of only 190 and 300 mV required to achieve current densities of 10 mA cm-2 (j10) and 300 mA cm-2 (j300), respectively, along with a low Tafel slope of 48.1 mV dec-1 in 1.0 M KOH. Remarkably, benefiting from rich active sites exposed on the IrO2-P-CoCH (Ir) heterostructure, the synergistic effect between IrO2 and CoCH enhances the charge delivery rates, and the IrO2-P-CoCH/PCC exhibits a superior electrocatalytic activity at a high current density (300 mV/j300) compared to the commercial benchmarked RuO2/PCC (470 mV/j300). Furthermore, the IrO2-P-CoCH/PCC electrocatalyst shows exceptional OER stability, with a mere 1.3% decrease with a current density of j10 for 100 h testing, surpassing most OER catalysts based on CC substrates. This work introduces a novel approach for designing high-performance OER electrocatalysts on flexible electrode substrates.

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