Abstract

Dealloyed nanoporous metals made of very-reactive elements have rarely been reported. Instead, reactive materials are used as sacrificial components in dealloying. The high chemical reactivity of nonprecious nanostructured metals makes them suitable for a broad range of applications such as splitting water into H2 gas and metal hydroxide. On the other hand, the same high chemical reactivity hinders the synthesis of nanostructured metals. Here we use a pH-controlled dealloying strategy to fabricate bulk nanoporous Zn with bulk dimensions in the centimeter range via the selective removal of Al from metastable face-centered cubic bulk Zn20Al80 at. % parent alloys. The corresponding bulk nanoporous Zn exhibits a hierarchical ligament/pore architecture characterized by primary ligaments and pores with an average feature size in the submicrometer range. These primary structures are made of ultrafine secondary ligaments and pores with a characteristic feature size in the range of 10–20 nm. Our bulk nanoporous Zn can split water into H2 and Zn(OH)2 at ambient temperature and pressure and continuously produce H2 at a constant rate of 0.08 mL/min per gram of Zn over 8 h. We anticipate that in this hierarchical bulk architecture, the macropores facilitate the flow of water in the bulk of the material, while the mesopores and ultrafine ligaments provide a high surface area for the reaction of water with Zn. The bulk nanoporous Zn/water system can be used for on-board or on-demand H2 applications, during which H2 is produced when needed, without prior storage of this gas compressed in cylinders as it is currently the case.

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