Unveiling the Role of Electrochemical Activation for Iron-doped Ni
Oxyhydroxide in Enhancing the Catalytic Performance of Oxygen Evolution
Reaction
Abstract
Water electrolysis using renewable electricity is a promising strategy
for high-purity hydrogen production. To realize the practical
application of water electrolysis, an electrocatalyst with high redox
properties and low cost is essential for enhancing the sluggish oxygen
evolution reaction (OER). Herein, we fabricated Fe-doped nickel oxalate
(Fe-NiC2O4) directly grown on Ni foam as an efficient electrocatalyst
for the alkaline OER using a facile one-step hydrothermal method.
Fe-NiC2O4 served as a precursor for obtaining highly active Fe-NiOOH via
in-situ electrochemical oxidation. Consequently, 0.75Fe-NiOOH was
demonstrated to be the optimal electrocatalyst, exhibiting outstanding
OER activity with a low overpotential of 220 mV at a current density of
100 mA cm−2 and a Tafel slope of 20.5 mV dec-1. Furthermore, Fe-NiOOH
maintained its OER activity without performance decay during long-term
electrochemical measurements, owing to the phase transformation from
NiOOH to γ-NiOOH. These performances significantly surpass those of
recently reported transition metal-based electrocatalysts.