Dual-anion regulation engineering enhances chloridion corrosion resistance for long-lasting industrial-scale seawater splitting
Abstract
Developing non-precious metal electrocatalysts with high activity and high chlorine (Cl−) corrosion resistance at industrial current densities remains challenging for large-scale seawater splitting. To address this problem, we rationally design an amorphous cobalt–iron layered double hydroxide with intercalated borate anions (B4O5(OH)42−–CoFe-LDH) grown over crystalline sulfurized cobalt molybdate with a sulfate-rich surface (SO42−–CoMoO4) nanohybrid (B4O5(OH)42−–CoFe-LDH/SO42−–CoMoO4). Through sulfidation and amorphous/crystalline interface construction, multiple synergistic effects are induced, effectively modulating the electronic structure, increasing the number of accessible active sites, and promoting electron transfer. The density functional theory calculations and in situ spectroscopy measurements demonstrate that the integration of B4O5(OH)42−–CoFe-LDH and SO42−–CoMoO4 synergistically optimizes the adsorption energy of intermediates, lowers the reaction energy barrier, and facilitates the formation of CoOOH active species, enhancing the catalytic activity for the oxygen evolution reaction. The unique B4O5(OH)42−/SO42− dual-anion layers block the unfavorable adsorption of Cl− and contribute to increased resistance to Cl−, enabling long-term corrosion protection for stable seawater splitting. Inspiringly, the B4O5(OH)42−–CoFe-LDH/SO42−–CoMoO4 nanohybrid stably sustains the industrial current density (1 A cm−2) in alkaline simulated seawater for 720 hours, with only a minimal concentration of hypochlorite (ClO−, 0.0003%) in the electrolyte.