Robust nanoporous NiMn oxide electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction through defect engineering†
Abstract
The sluggish oxygen evolution reaction (OER) remains a major bottleneck in hydrogen generation through electrolysis, particularly in large current operations. Thus, there is a huge interest in the development of highly active and robust non-noble metal-based OER catalysts. Herein, we report excellent catalytic performance of oxygen vacancy enriched, nano-porous Mn3O4/Ni/NiMnO3 architecture, synthesized in situ over a NiMn substrate through high-rate straining and chemical dealloying. The multiphase active surface exhibits significantly low overpotentials of only 262 mV and 282 mV even at high current densities of 500 mA cm−2 and 1000 mA cm−2, respectively. Our first-principles analysis revealed the prevalence of multi-site lattice oxygen-mediated pathways with two parallel mechanisms of direct evolution of O2, (a) facile cleavage of Ni–O bonds at the NiMnO3 surface and release of lattice oxygen and (b) activation of under-coordinated Mn–O polyhedra at the Ni/NiMnO3 interface and cleavage of OH groups by protonation of surface O atoms. The presence of oxygen vacancies leads to electronic reconstruction, further enhancing the adsorption kinetics of reaction intermediates.