Abstract

Urea holds promise as an alternative water-oxidation substrate in electrolytic cells. High-valence nickel-based spinel, especially after heteroatom doping, excels in urea oxidation reactions (UOR). However, traditional spinel synthesis methods with prolonged high-temperature reactions lack kinetic precision, hindering the balance between controlled doping and highly active two-dimensional (2D) porous structures design. This significantly impedes the identification of electron configuration-dependent active sites in doped 2D nickel-based spinels. Herein, we present a microwave shock method for the preparation of 2D porous NiCo2O4 spinel. Utilizing the transient on-off property of microwave pulses for precise heteroatom doping and 2D porous structural design, non-metal doping (boron, phosphorus, and sulfur) with distinct extranuclear electron disparities serves as straightforward examples for investigation. Precise tuning of lattice parameter reveals the impact of covalent bond strength on NiCo2O4 structural stability. The introduced defect levels induce unpaired d-electrons in transition metals, enhancing the adsorption of electron-donating amino groups in urea molecules. Simultaneously, Bode plots confirm the impact mechanism of rapid electron migration caused by reduced band gaps on UOR activity. The prepared phosphorus-doped 2D porous NiCo2O4, with optimal electron configuration control, outperforms most reported spinels. This controlled modification strategy advances understanding theoretical structure-activity mechanisms of high-performance 2D spinels in UOR.

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