An organic–inorganic heterojunction electrocatalyst for highly efficient urea oxidation†
Abstract
Constructing a p–n heterojunction allows the modulation of the interfacial electronic structure and boosts electron transfer, leading to enhanced electrocatalytic performance. Herein, an organic–inorganic heterojunction electrocatalyst made of Ni(OH)2, a triazine-based covalent organic framework (COF), and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs), denoted as Ni(OH)2/COF/CNT, is reported to exhibit significantly enhanced electrocatalytic performance for urea oxidation in comparison with its single- and double-component counterparts (Ni(OH)2, COF/CNT, Ni(OH)2/CNT, and Ni(OH)2/COF). As revealed by its band structure analysis, the constructed Ni(OH)2-COF (p–n) heterojunction enables a built-in electric field to boost charge transfer across the heterointerface (from the inorganic Ni(OH)2 to the organic COF), resulting in significantly improved catalytic activity. The mass activity is 363 A gNi(OH)2−1 at 1.5 V (vs. reversible hydrogen electrode, RHE) for the Ni(OH)2/COF/CNT heterojunction electrocatalyst, showing 322 and 72% enhancement in comparison with Ni(OH)2 and Ni(OH)2/CNT, respectively. Moreover, Ni(OH)2/COF/CNT exhibits a considerable turnover frequency (TOF, 0.11 s−1 at 1.5 V), large reaction rate constant (k = 1.9 × 106 cm3 mol−1 s−1), high coulombic efficiency (∼98%), and meritorious catalytic stability (24 hours at 20 mA cm−2) for urea oxidation. The present work enriches the design strategies for developing advanced electrocatalysts.