Abstract
Hydrogen generation by alkaline electrochemical water splitting urgently requires new techniques capable of fabricating efficient and robust electrocatalysts for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, it remains a major challenge to achieve this aim through a conjoint modulation in morphology and electronic structure. Herein, a metal–organic framework-derived (MOF-derived) Ru doped cobalt–nickel oxide heterostructure grown on Ni foam (Ru-Co3O4-NiO-NF) is fabricated by a simple and scalable preparation method. Systematic experimental characterizations verify that through a tailored low-temperature annealing process, the resulted Ru-Co3O4-NiO-NF can effectively inherit the advantageous two-dimensional (2D) nanosheet morphology of Co-MOF precursor and simultaneously maintain the mechanical robustness of three-dimensional (3D) Ni foam, which are beneficial for active site exposure and charge or mass transport. Furthermore, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and density functional theory (DFT) calculation are hired to reveal that Ru-doping and Co3O4-NiO heterointerface can collectively regulate the electronic state of Ni and Co sites, thus optimizing the H2O adsorption/desorption and proton adsorption in alkaline HER process. As expected, the optimized Ru-Co3O4-NiO-NF is much more active than the commercial Pt-C (20 wt%) for electrocatalytic HER in 1 M KOH, exhibiting the low overpotential of 44 mV and 115 mV at the current density of 10 mA cm−2 and 100 mA cm−2. Moreover, the obtained self-supported electrode material can maintain catalytic activity over 60 h at 100 mA cm−2 without significant decay. This study provides a new perspective for constructing the advanced MOF-derived alkaline HER self-supported electrocatalysts by synergistic engineering of morphology and electronic structure for future energy application.
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