Iron Vacancies Induced Bifunctionality in Ultrathin Feroxyhyte Nanosheets for Overall Water Splitting

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

279 Scopus Citations
View graph of relations

Author(s)

  • Bin Liu
  • Yun Wang
  • Hui-Qing Peng
  • Ruoou Yang
  • Zheng Jiang
  • Xingtai Zhou
  • Huijun Zhao

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Article number1803144
Journal / PublicationAdvanced Materials
Volume30
Issue number36
Online published18 Jul 2018
Publication statusPublished - 6 Sept 2018

Abstract

Exploring of new catalyst activation principle holds a key to unlock catalytic powers of cheap and earth-abundant materials for large-scale applications. In this regard, the vacancy defects have been proven to be effective to initiate catalytic active sites and endow high electrocatalytic activities. However, such electrocatalytically active defects reported to date have been mostly formed by anion vacancies. Herein, it is demonstrated for the first time that iron cation vacancies induce superb water splitting bifunctionality in alkaline media. A simple wet-chemistry method is developed to grow ultrathin feroxyhyte (δ-FeOOH) nanosheets with rich Fe vacancies on Ni foam substrate. The theoretical and experimental results confirm that, in contrast to anion vacancies, the formation of rich second neighboring Fe to Fe vacancies in δ-FeOOH nanosheets can create catalytic active centers for both hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions. The atomic level insight into the new catalyst activation principle based on metal vacancies is adaptable for developing other transition metal electrocatalysts, including Fe-based ones.

Research Area(s)

  • atomic level insight, catalyst activation principle, iron cation vacancies, ultrathin feroxyhyte nanosheets, water splitting bifunctionality

Citation Format(s)

Iron Vacancies Induced Bifunctionality in Ultrathin Feroxyhyte Nanosheets for Overall Water Splitting. / Liu, Bin; Wang, Yun; Peng, Hui-Qing et al.
In: Advanced Materials, Vol. 30, No. 36, 1803144, 06.09.2018.

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review