Balancing Ru-O Bond Covalency and Strength via Atomically Ta Doping for Robust Acidic Oxygen Evolution

Abstract

Ruthenium dioxide electrocatalysts hold the promise of high oxygen evolution reaction activity in proton exchange membrane water electrolyser (PEMWE). However, control of its stability remains extremely challenging due to the easy oxidation and dissolution during electrochemical reaction. Herein, we address this challenge by constructing atomically dispersed Ta-O-Ru asymmetric local motifs for efficient and stable OER process via a simple molten salt assisted method. The optimized candidate (RuOx-10Ta) exhibits a low overpotential of 189 mV and high durability exceeding 700 hours at 10 mA cm-2, boasting a sixfold longer lifespan than commercial RuO2. In-situ characterizations and DFT calculations reveal that, in this asymmetric configuration, high-valent Ta dopants downshift the O 2p and Ru 4d band centres, and thus moderate Ru-O covalency to facilitate water dissociation and intermediate transformation. Meanwhile, this Ta-O-Ru motif with robust Ta-O bond acts as an electron and structure buffer that suppresses lattice oxygen loss and Ru overoxidation, enhancing the overall catalyst stability. When integrated into a PEMWE device as anode catalyst, a low cell voltage of 1.639 V at 1 A cm-2 and sustained stable operation for over 200 hours at 200 mA cm-2 were achieved. These findings highlight the potential of asymmetric coordination engineering as a generalizable strategy for developing robust and efficient OER catalysts under harsh acidic conditions.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Sep 2025
Accepted
20 Oct 2025
First published
22 Oct 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Balancing Ru-O Bond Covalency and Strength via Atomically Ta Doping for Robust Acidic Oxygen Evolution

C. Ma, N. Zhang, D. Wang, J. Ren, T. Jiang, T. Liu, A. A. Zverko, H. Zhong and X. Zhang, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA07271A

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