Abstract

The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a half-cell reaction that is of importance to many electrochemical processes, especially for electrochemical and photoelectrochemical water splitting. Developing efficient, durable, and low-cost OER electrocatalysts comprising Earth-abundant elements has been in the focus of electrocatalysis research. Herein, we report a cost-effective, scalable, and template-free approach to the fabrication of hollow iron phosphide–phosphate (FeP–FePxOy) composite nanotubes (NTs), which is realized by hydrothermal growth of iron oxy-hydroxide nanorods (NRs) and a subsequent postphosphorization treatment. The hollow interior of NTs results from the Kirkendall effect occurring upon phosphorization. When used to catalyze the OER in basic medium, the as-synthesized FeP–FePxOy composite NTs exhibit excellent catalytic activity, delivering the benchmark current density of 10 mA cm–2 at a low overpotential of 280 mV and showing a small Tafel slope of 48 mV dec–1 and a high turnover frequen...

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