Issue 17, 2021

Sustainable oxygen evolution catalysis – electrochemical generation of mössbauerite via corrosion engineering of steel

Abstract

A versatile electrochemical corrosion process was used to generate green rust (GR) on a steel substrate and to transform it into the trivalent iron-only oxygen evolution catalyst mössbauerite (GR*) upon a subsequent oxidation process. Besides being scalable, cheap, and time-efficient, the demonstrated procedure is based on earth-abundant and non-hazardous materials only. Oxidation of mixed-valence Fe2+/Fe3+ GR to GR* was achieved by chemical and electrochemical processes. The latter induces less grafting of interlayer CO32−, leading to less contraction of the interlayer space and a reduction in the observable stacking disorder. The direct electrodeposition of the catalyst on a conductive substrate enabled the first systematic study of the impact of grafting on the performance of GR* in the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The materials subjected to chemical (GR*ChOx) and electrochemical oxidation (GR*ElOx) allowed obtaining a current density of 100 mA cm−2 at 1.82 V and 1.84 V, respectively, thus improving the electrocatalytic capabilities and outperforming the bare steel substrate operated in 1 M KOH solutions.

Graphical abstract: Sustainable oxygen evolution catalysis – electrochemical generation of mössbauerite via corrosion engineering of steel

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Apr 2021
Accepted
13 Jul 2021
First published
13 Jul 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Mater. Adv., 2021,2, 5650-5656

Sustainable oxygen evolution catalysis – electrochemical generation of mössbauerite via corrosion engineering of steel

S. Weiß, A. V. Radha, M. Ertl, C. McCammon and J. Breu, Mater. Adv., 2021, 2, 5650 DOI: 10.1039/D1MA00381J

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