Suoyuan
Lian‡
a,
Michelle P.
Browne‡
a,
Carlota
Domínguez
a,
Serban N.
Stamatin
a,
Hugo
Nolan
a,
Georg S.
Duesberg
a,
Michael E. G.
Lyons
a,
Emiliano
Fonda
b and
Paula E.
Colavita
*a
aSchool of Chemistry, CRANN and AMBER Research Centres, Trinity College Dublin, College Green, Dublin 2, Ireland. E-mail: colavitp@tcd.ie
bSynchrotron SOLEIL L'Orme de Merisiers, St Aubin BP48, 91192 Gif sur Yvette Cedex, France
First published on 12th April 2017
Porous manganese carbonate was obtained via solvothermal synthesis using ethanol and urea. The manganese carbonate was subsequently used as a precursor to synthesise mesoporous manganese oxides via thermal treatments at three various temperatures. X-ray diffraction and Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) results shows that γ-MnO2 is synthesised at 380 and 450 °C while Mn2O3 is produced at the annealing temperature of 575 °C. X-ray absorption spectra show that γ-MnO2 converts completely to Mn2O3 after annealing over the 450–575 °C range. The oxides obtained at 380 °C and 450 °C possess extremely high specific surface area, which is of interest for catalytic applications. The oxides were investigated as electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction; the oxide prepared at the lowest annealing temperature was found to be the optimum catalyst with an overpotential of 427 ± 10 mV at a current density of 10 mA cm−2, normalised by the geometric area. The improved catalytic activity was related to the presence of defect-rich and highly porous manganese dioxide at the lowest annealing temperature.
Water electrolysis results in the formation of O2 at the anode, via the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), and of H2 at the cathode. Even though the main goal for energy applications is to generate H2 at the cathode, the majority of research efforts concentrate on the anodic reaction. The OER is the rate determining step of water electrolysis which also makes it the most energy demanding electrode process; therefore, a reduction in the OER overpotential can translate into greater efficiency in hydrogen production.6 To date, RuO2 is regarded as the most active OER catalyst in alkaline media as this oxide catalyses water oxidation at the lowest known overpotentials at a current density of 10 mA cm−2.11,12 However, its commercial application is limited owing to its high cost and low abundance.13
Transition metal oxides (TMOs), from the first row of the periodic table, in particular Mn, Fe, Co and Ni oxides, are viable candidates to replace IrO2 and RuO2 as OER catalysts.14,15 Currently in literature, a vast number of reports on water oxidation focus on applications of nickel, cobalt and iron oxides as electrocatalysts; however, there has been a recent increased interest in investigating manganese oxides as catalysts for the OER.2,16–29 Some of the reported OER activities of manganese oxides in literature are extremely encouraging.11,30–33 Suib et al. studied the OER capabilities of three phases of MnO2, α, β and γ, on a carbon support that were fabricated through three similar hydrothermal routes. The overpotential at 10 mA cm−2 for the α, β and γ phases were 0.49, 0.60 and 0.74 V, respectively.30 These results indicate that small changes in the synthetic method alter the resulting phase and the OER activity. Commercial MnO, Mn3O4, Mn2O3 and MnO2 powder samples, made into an ink dispersion, were deposited onto a glassy carbon substrate and tested as OER catalysts by Jaramillo et al.34 The overpotentials of 0.51, 0.43, 0.53 and 0.5 V were reached to obtain a current density of 10 mA cm−2 for the MnO, Mn3O4, Mn2O3 and MnO2, respectively. Interestingly, Fiechter et al. fabricated Mn3O4 and Mn2O3 by an electrodeposition/thermal process.35 This study showed that the Mn2O3 was a superior OER catalyst when compared to Mn3O4, which contradicted the previous report by Jaramillo et al.34,35 Additionally the MnO2 materials produced by Jaramillo et al. and Suib et al. also exhibited varying overpotential values at 10 mA cm−2. Therefore, the specific fabrication process used to synthesise the Mn oxide clearly plays a critical role in determining the activity of the material for the OER.
The physical structure of the OER catalysts, such as shape or surface area, strongly affects their performance.19,36–38 The surface area of a material has been previously linked to an increase in the OER catalytic activity of metal oxides due to the potential increased density of active sites.39 Solvothermal synthesis can be used to fabricate porous materials,40 most notably using soft or hard templates;41,42 however, the templates required for the formation of porous products must be etched post synthesis and this removal stage is time consuming and adds to the complexity of the process. A solution to this consists of using precursors that decompose into gaseous products so that gas bubbles template pore formation during the synthesis. Lian et al., has previously used urea as a precipitant for the formation of metal hydroxides and after annealing, a porous structure remains.43 Precipitants such as urea or NH4HCO3 are routinely used under hydrothermal conditions however in this study urea will be used under solvothermal conditions.43–46
Synthesis of Mn oxides for OER applications via solvothermal methods is relatively underexplored compared to electrochemical and thermal methods.19,28,31,35,47 In this work, porous MnCO3 was synthesised by a template free solvothermal-urea method; urea was used as the precipitant and ethanol as the solvent under solvothermal conditions. Solvothermal conditions were preferred over hydrothermal conditions as ethanol results in higher pressure in a closed reactor compared to water at the same temperature, which was expected to promote porosity in the carbonate material. The resulting MnCO3 was used as a precursor for the subsequent preparation of Mn oxides via thermal decomposition at different temperatures. The materials were characterised by a variety of techniques to determine composition, morphology, and surface area. Voltammetry experiments in alkaline media show that the synthesised oxides are active in the OER; trends in onset potential are interpreted and discussed in relation to the structural and morphological properties.
X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) and Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) measurements were undertaken at the SAMBA beamline at SOLEIL synchrotron, France.48 Pellets were fabricated using cellulose and 6 wt% of the relevant Mn material then mounted in a holder for analysis; all pellets were measured in transmittance mode at the Mn K-edge. Reference samples (purchased from Sigma) of MnO (manganosite), Mn3O4 (hausmannite), α-Mn2O3 and β-MnO2 were recorded in addition to synthesised samples for the analysis of edge positions. All samples were calibrated using a Mn foil during the experiments. Data analysis was performed using Athena and Artemis software packages;49 calculation of scattering paths was carried out using FEFF v.8.4 and self-consistent potentials.50 EXAFS data was extracted as described by Newville et al.51 with a Rbkg = 1. The Fourier Transform (FT) was performed between k = 3 and 10.5 Å−1 with a Hanning apodization window with sills of amplitude dk = 1. The EXAFS signal was weighted by k3 and fitted in r-space between 1 and 4 Å; both real and imaginary parts were fitted according to the procedure described by Newville.52
Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) was also performed on the three synthesised MnCO3 to investigate phase changes during the thermal treatment in air to determine which powder would be the best precursor for producing metal oxides, Fig. 1b. The loss of mass in the temperature region of 0–220 °C can be attributed to the loss of approximately 5% of water for all the MnCO3 powders. At 220 °C, the MnCO3 is known to decompose to form MnO2 as discussed by Zhu et al.53 For the sample prepared at 180 °C, the weight loss, after accounting for the loss of water, is approximately 31%, which is in agreement with a transition from MnCO3 to Mn2O3.54 The samples prepared at 160 °C and 140 °C have a lower weight loss of 24% and 23%, which suggests the co-existence of lower Mn oxide species after thermal treatment, likely associated with the presence of Mn3O4 identified in the XRD of the starting sample (Fig. 1a). The significant weight loss resulting from decomposition of the sample prepared at 180 °C indicates that this is the precursor compound that results in the greatest gas evolution, thus suggesting potential for high porosity upon thermal treatment. Since high specific surface area is a desirable property for applications in catalysis, the MnCO3 synthesised at 180 °C was henceforth chosen as the precursor for the formation of the Mn oxide catalysts for OER.
Nitrogen adsorption/desorption isotherms were analysed to determine specific surface area and pore size distribution of the MnCO3 precursor and of the oxides obtained after thermal treatment in air, Fig. 2 and Table 1. Fig. 2a, shows that all samples display characteristic type-IV adsorption isotherms.55 The specific surface areas calculated using the BET method are reported in Table 1; results indicate that the carbonate precursor has an initially high porosity of 100 m2 g−1 which is high compared to a previously reported commercial MnCO3 sample with a value of 11.3 m2 g−1 and to some of the recently reported porous MnCO3.53,56 After thermal treatment, the materials formed remain highly porous after annealing treatments at 380 and 450 °C, while the surface area collapses after annealing at 575 °C. The BET surface areas of the Mn-380 and the Mn-450 materials are significantly higher than those typically reported in literature for Mn oxides from thermal decomposition of MnCO3.57,58 The pore size distribution of all samples obtained via Barrett–Joyner–Halenda (BJH) analysis of desorption branches can be observed in Fig. 2b. For the as-prepared MnCO3, the pore size is predominately in the range of 1.5–2.5 nm, while after annealing at 380, 450 or 575 °C, a maximum in the pore size distribution develops in the range 3–10 nm; this indicates that gas evolution after thermal treatment of MnCO3 leads to the opening of pores in the mesopore range. The use of ethanol as the solvent was crucial for the development of a porous structure in MnCO3, as shown by the synthesis of MnCO3 using hydrothermal conditions. Fig. 2a and b show the adsorption/desorption isotherms and BJH pore distribution, respectively, of the hydrothermal precursor. Almost no hysteresis loop is observed in Fig. 2a suggesting that no porous structure forms during the hydrothermal process of the same materials, and the BET surface area was 90% lower than that obtained under solvothermal conditions.
Sample | BET area (m2 g−1) |
---|---|
MnCO3 | 100 |
Mn-380 | 109 |
Mn-450 | 101 |
Mn-575 | 48 |
Hydrothermal | 9.7 |
All of the materials after the annealing treatment were comprised of sheets or particles which group together to form spherical structures, Fig. 2c–e. After the preparation of the dispersion via sonication the spherical structures are disrupted resulting in solid particles that could be deposited onto solid surfaces, as shown in Fig. 2f–h. There was no apparent variation observed in the morphology of the Mn-380 and Mn-450 samples whereas particles in the Mn-575 appear smaller when compared to the lower annealing temperatures.
Changes in particle morphology were further investigated via TEM; Fig. 3a–d show images of the MnCO3 precursor and the Mn-380, Mn-450 and Mn-575 powders. Before any heat treatment to the MnCO3, the solid particles display a nanosheet-like morphology, Fig. 3a, with the size of these MnCO3 nanosheets in the range 100–200 nm. After thermal treatment at 380 and 450 °C, a sheet-like morphology is still present the MnCO3 precursor particles. After thermal treatment at 575 °C a significant change in morphology is observed, whereby particles appear to be denser.
Fig. 3 TEM images of (a) MnCO3, (b) Mn-380 (c) Mn-450 and (d) Mn-575. Scale bar for all images is shown in (d). |
The XRD patterns of the precursor MnCO3 and of the compounds obtained after thermal treatment at 380, 450 and 575 °C are shown in Fig. 4a. Upon increasing annealing temperature it can be observed that the XRD pattern is dramatically altered from the MnCO3 starting material. For the MnCO3, all peaks can be indexed to a standard MnCO3 (COD: 9007691) as previously discussed. The sample treated at the lowest temperature of 380 °C exhibits broad peaks that are in agreement with those reported for electrolytic manganese dioxides (EMD), Fig. 4b.61 EMD is proposed to be composed of both ε-MnO2 and γ-MnO2, however γ-MnO2 is the predominant phase.61 The reflections at 23.0°, 37.0°, 42.1°, 55.2° and 66.3° are in agreement with the EMD structure studied by Simon et al.61 while an additional broad peak at 31.4° can be attributed to the starting material, MnCO3. Raman analysis of the Mn-380 sample (see ESI†) also indicates that a phase of MnO2 is present, Fig. S2;† the intense peak at 661 cm−1 can be attributed to ε-MnO2 in agreement with results reported by Lin et al.60,61 After thermal treatment at 450 °C, the XRD pattern displays similar reflections to those of Mn-380, while additional peaks consistent with the presence of Mn2O3 are also evident at 33.0°, 55.2° and 65.8°, Fig. 4c.19 After treatment at 575 °C the XRD pattern displays narrow peaks, Fig. 4d, that can all be indexed to standard Mn2O3 (COD: 9007520), thus indicating the complete conversion of the material to pure Mn2O3 oxide phase. The Raman spectrum for Mn-575 also confirms a change in the oxide structure, with peaks in agreement with those observed for Mn2O3 by Julien et al.62
Fig. 4 (a) XRD pattern of MnCO3, Mn-380, Mn-450 and Mn-575; (b) Mn-380 and (c) Mn-450 compared to γ-MnO2 and ε-MnO2 patterns from literature;59,60 (d) Mn-575 compared to COD reference for Mn2O3 (COD: 9007520). |
The presence of broad peaks and mixed phases in XRD patterns indicates that materials obtained from the thermal decomposition of MnCO3 in air possess low crystallinity and are structurally disordered. XAS was therefore used to characterise MnCO3 and MnOx powders. Normalised absorption spectra at the Mn K-edge for MnCO3, Mn-380, Mn-450 and Mn-575 samples are shown in Fig. 5a. The absorption edge energy of Mn-380 and Mn-450 is higher than that of Mn-575, thus indicating that Mn-centres in MnOx powders synthesised at 380 and 450 °C have a higher average oxidation state than in the MnOx powder annealed at 575 °C.63 A comparison with the precursor MnCO3 sample also shows that in all cases the oxidation state is higher than that in the carbonate precursor. The normalised X-ray absorption near edge (XANES) spectra of Mn-380 and Mn-450 samples are indistinguishable thus indicating that their structure is similar, in agreement with XRD results. The XANES of Mn-575 samples was found to match that of Mn2O3, as shown in Fig. 5b, also confirming the XRD assignments. The Mn-380 sample could not be fitted through a combination of any of the reference samples tested and its structure was determined via further analysis of the extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectrum as discussed below.
To confirm the presence of ε-MnO2 and/or γ-MnO2 in Mn-380 suggested by the XRD pattern, the EXAFS spectrum was fitted in R space, Fig. 5c; the fit presented includes only single scattering contributions up to 4 Å and was obtained by fixing S02 at 0.8. The positions and amplitudes of the main peaks in the best fit match the coordination number (N) and distances (R) of the Mn–O(1), Mn–Mn(1), Mn–O(2) and Mn–Mn(2) coordination shells of γ-MnO2. The scattering path parameters N and R obtained for the best fit of Mn-380 can be observed in Table 2 and are in excellent agreement with those reported by Godart et al. for γ-MnO2;64 the mean-square displacements are relatively large and indicate significant disorder in the oxide structure. Fits which included coordination shells characteristic of ε-MnO2 resulted in a significant reduction in the goodness of fit (see ESI, Fig. S3†). In summary, XAS results show that Mn-380 and Mn-450 samples consist of predominantly γ-MnO2, whereas Mn-575 samples mainly consist of Mn2O3.
Path | R (Å) | N | σ 2 (Å2) |
---|---|---|---|
Mn–O(1) | 1.92(1) | 6 | 0.008(2) |
Mn–Mn(1) | 2.91(2) | 2 | 0.009(3) |
Mn–O(2) | 3.25(3) | 2 | 0.04(1) |
Mn–Mn(2) | 3.50(3) | 8 | 0.016(4) |
The Mn-380 exhibits the highest activity for OER and the overpotential (η) at a current density of 10 mA cm−2 is 427 ± 10 mV. The overpotentials at the same current density for the Mn-450 and Mn-575 materials are 470 ± 10 mV and 570 ± 20 mV, respectively. The MnCO3 starting material proves to be very inactive for the OER as it only reaches a current density of approximately 0.72 mA cm−2 at the overpotential of 570 mV. The relative order of activity is the same also when the current density is normalized by the BET area of each material (see Fig. S5†). This result indicates that the annealing step is a critical step in this study. The overpotentials were found to be constant over three cycles for all materials; however stability over prolonged cycling was limited by physical spalling during OER due to low adhesion between the ITO support and the oxide. This suggests that mechanical stability of the supported particles must be optimised for future device applications, as previously noted for other OER catalysts.65
The improved performance of the Mn-380 is likely related to the specific oxide phase and/or the increased surface area of this material. The structure of the sample is consistent with that observed for highly disordered MnO2 phases, based on both XRD and XAS. The Mn–O(1) distance is typical of Mn(IV)/Mn(III) oxides,17 while the Mn–Mn(1) distance indicates the presence of edge-sharing MnO6 octahedra, often associated with catalytically active MnOx.17,26,29 High structural disorder, as evidenced by XRD and XAS in this sample, is also associated with activity in the OER.26,29 It is interesting to note that a Mn–Mn(1) 2.91 Å distance is somewhat longer than that observed for di-μ-oxo bridged Mn(IV) centres, this being typically 2.86 Å.27,29 This is suggestive of the presence of a fraction of Mn(IV)–(μ-O)2–Mn(III) contributions27 that cannot be resolved but that are consistent with the high values of Debye Waller factors obtained in our fits. It is a current hypothesis that disordered Mn oxides with valences above (III) and below (IV) are active in OER.27–29,66 A plot of the edge position against the Mn-oxidation state for reference samples used in our XAS experiments can be used to approximate the oxidation state of Mn-centres via a linear interpolation, as previously shown in the literature.27,59 This approach shows that Mn-380 has an oxidation state intermediate between (III) and (IV) (see Fig. S7†), again supporting the presence of defects and vacancies that result in mixed Mn-valence and contribute to OER activity. The presence of mixed Mn(III)/Mn(IV) centres in disordered and layered MnO2 oxides is known to result in slow, long-term transformations (over months/years) that result from stress release via migration of Mn(III) centres and cation rearrangement.67 Accordingly, we have observed similar slow transformations in the most active Mn-380, as shown by the slow appearance of additional reflections in the XRD pattern upon prolongued ageing (see Fig. S8†), which are accompanied by a reduction of activity compared to freshly prepared samples. This is not observed in the case of the least active materials, thus indicating that high OER activity is associated to a defect-rich metastable oxide phase in agreement with other oxides with reported high activity in the OER.68 Finally, the Mn-380 also exhibits the largest surface area which is also consistent with this being the most active of the oxides examined.
The Mn-450 shows a very slight increase in the amount of Mn2O3, based on its XRD pattern, when compared to the Mn-380 and a slight decrease in the BET surface area. Samples treated in air at 575 °C are completely converted to Mn2O3, and the surface area also decreases drastically. From the LSV curves, a reduction in the OER performance can be observed for the Mn-575, therefore this decrease may be linked to the decrease in surface area and the presence of Mn2O3 which is proposed to be less active than MnO2 phases in the OER.69
When comparing with literature values, the Mn-380 has an improved OER activity compared to the most active manganese oxide catalysts prepared by Suib et al.30 The hydrothermally produced α-MnO2 oxide exhibited BET surface area values of 112 m2 g−1 and an overpotential value at 10 mA cm−2 of 490 mV. It is evident that the surface area of Mn-380 in this study and the MnO2 prepared by Suib et al. are similar. Hence, the overpotential decrease of 60 mV for the Mn-380 in this study is likely attributable to the improved performance of the specific oxide phase, i.e. γ-MnO2vs. α-MnO2. The Mn-380 also has improved OER capabilities when compared to other manganese oxides produced by wet chemistry methods in literature.26,35,40 This might be attributable to the manganese carbonate synthesised solvothermally in this study, which offers a robust mesoporous structure as a precursor platform for the further synthesis of the OER active Mn-380 material. Even after annealing at 380 °C, the mesoporous structure can still be retained after the MnO2 phase is formed.
All of the oxides were tested as catalysts for the OER and the sample prepared at 380 °C was found to exhibit the lowest overpotential at a current density of 10 mA cm−2 of 427 ± 10 mV. This performance when compared to that of oxides obtained at higher temperatures is likely due to both the high specific surface area of the material and the specific oxide phase (γ-MnO2) that results from the thermal process. In conclusion, these results indicate that solvothermal synthesis of MnCO3 is a viable route for the facile synthesis of electroactive mesoporous manganese dioxide. Interestingly, the material exhibits catalytic activity in the OER that is similar to or better than other MnOx catalysts currently in literature thus opening the possibility of a new family of low-cost OER catalysts for water splitting.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Further characterisation data including an image of MnOx powders, Raman, XAS, XRD and LSVs. See DOI: 10.1039/c7se00086c |
‡ Joint first author. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |