Abstract

The development of reliable production routes for sustainable hydrogen (H2), which is an essential feedstock for industrial processes and energy carrier for fuel cells, is needed. It appears to be an unavoidable alternative to significantly reduce the dependence on conventional energy sources based on fossil fuels without increasing the atmospheric CO2 levels. Among the different power-to-X scenarios to access high purity H2, the electrochemical approach based on electrolysis looks to be a promising sustainable solution at both the small and large industrial scales. However, the practical realization of this important opportunity faces several challenges, including the efficient design of cost-effective catalytic materials to be used as a cathode with improved intrinsic and durable activity. In this contribution, we report the design and development of efficient nanostructured catalysts for the electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in aqueous media, whereby noble metal-free elements are embedded in a matrix of a conducting polymer, polyaniline (PANI). To increase the electrical conductivity and further the electrocatalytic ability toward HER of the chemically polymerized PANI in the presence of nickel (II) salt (nitrate), the PANI-based materials have first been stabilized at a mild temperature of 250–350°C in air and then carbonized at 800–1,000°C under nitrogen gas to convert the chemical species into nitrogen, sulfur, nickel, and carbon nanostructured networks (CNNs). Different physicochemical (TGA-DSC, Raman spectroscopy, XRD, SEM, EDX, ICP, CHNS, BET, and XPS) and electrochemical (voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectrometry) methods have been integrated to characterize the as-synthesized CNNs materials and interrogate the relationship of material-to-performance. It has been found that those synthesis conditions allow for the substantial increase of the electrocatalytic performance toward HER and OER in alkaline media in terms of the onset potential and charge transfer resistance and overpotential at the specific activity of 10 milliamps per square centimeter, thus ranking the present materials among the most efficient noble metal-free catalysts and making them possible candidates for integration in practical low-energy consumption alkaline electrolyzers.

Highlights

  • Molecular hydrogen (H2) plays a pivotal role in various industrial processes as a feedstock and an energy carrier involved in energy conversion and storage scenarios through electrolysis and fuel cells (Montoya et al, 2017; Stamenkovic et al, 2017; Hacker and Mitsushima, 2018; Kumar and Himabindu, 2019; Staffell et al, 2019)

  • We report a comprehensive study on the development of efficient nanostructured catalysts derived from polyaniline and nickel for the electrocatalytic hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions (HER and OER) in alkaline media

  • Nickel being at an ionic state Ni(+II), it is crucial that these species remain trapped in the polymerized material before the thermal treatment at a high temperature of one hundred degrees to get a particle state

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Molecular hydrogen (H2) plays a pivotal role in various industrial processes as a feedstock and an energy carrier involved in energy conversion and storage scenarios through electrolysis and fuel cells (Montoya et al, 2017; Stamenkovic et al, 2017; Hacker and Mitsushima, 2018; Kumar and Himabindu, 2019; Staffell et al, 2019). The only solution is to develop cost-effective materials to substitute those precious metals in electrocatalysts From this perspective, conducting polymers combined with low loading of metallic species are good candidates for high-performance electrocatalysts due to their interesting structural and physical properties (Ghosh et al, 2015, 2016, 2017; Wang et al, 2016a; Ramohlola et al, 2018). There is a lack of fundamental comprehension about the formation of those nickel-sulfur nanostructures In this contribution, we report a comprehensive study on the development of efficient nanostructured catalysts derived from polyaniline and nickel for the electrocatalytic hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions (HER and OER) in alkaline media. Accelerated aging tests were carried out by chronoamperometry and chronopotentiometry

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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