In situ unraveling surface reconstruction of Ni-CoP nanowire for
excellent alkaline water electrolysis
Abstract
The surface reconstruction behavior of transition metal phosphides
(TMPs) precursors is considered an important method to prepare efficient
oxygen evolution catalysts, but there are still significant challenges
in guiding catalyst design at the atomic scale. Here, the CoP nanowire
with excellent water splitting performance and stability is used as a
catalytic model to study the reconstruction process. Obvious double
redox signals and valence evolution behavior of the Co site are
observed, corresponding to Co2+/Co3+ and Co3+/Co4+ caused by
auto-oxidation process. Importantly, the in-situ Raman spectrum exhibits
the vibration signal of Co-OH in the non-Faradaic potential interval for
oxygen evolution reaction, which is considered the initial
reconstruction step . Density functional theory and ab initio molecular
dynamics are used to elucidate this process at the atomic scale: First,
OH- exhibits a lower adsorption energy barrier and proton desorption
energy barrier at the configuration surface, which proposes the
formation of a single oxygen group. Under a higher -O group coverage,
the Co-P bond is destroyed along with the POx groups. Subsequently,
lower P vacancy formation energy confirm that the Ni-CoP configuration
can fast transform into highly active phase. Based on optimized
reconstruction behavior and rate-limiting barrier, the Ni-CoP exhibit an
excellent overpotential of 236 mV for OER and 1.59 V for overall water
splitting at 10 mA cm-2, which demonstrates low degradation (2.62 %)
during the 100 mA cm-2 for 100 h. This work provide systematic insights
into the atomic-level reconstruction mechanism of TMPs, which benefit
further design of water splitting catalyst.