Promoting the hydrogen evolution reaction through oxygen vacancies and phase transformation engineering on layered double hydroxide nanosheets

Shujie Liu a, Jie Zhu a, Mao Sun a, Zhixue Ma a, Kan Hu a, Tomohiko Nakajima *b, Xianhu Liu c, Patrik Schmuki *d and Lei Wang *ac
aSchool of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Inner Mongolia Engineering and Technology Research Center for Catalytic Conversion and Utilization of Carbon Resource Molecules, Inner Mongolia University, 235 West University Street, Hohhot 010021, P. R. China. E-mail: wanglei@imu.edu.cn
bAdvanced Coating Technology Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba Central 5, 1-1-1 Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8565, Japan. E-mail: t-nakajima@aist.go.jp
cKey Laboratory of Materials Processing and Mold, Ministry of Education, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou 450002, P. R. China
dDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering WW4-LKO, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Martensstrasse 7, D-91058 Erlangen, Germany. E-mail: schmuki@ww.uni-erlangen.de

Received 21st November 2019 , Accepted 25th December 2019

First published on 30th December 2019


Abstract

In electrocatalysis, layered double hydroxide (LDH) materials have attracted considerable interest in promoting the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). For the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), these materials show a poor electrocatalytic activity. In this work, we take CoFe LDH grown on nickel foam as a model system, and for the first time we treat CoFe LDH under plasma etching conditions, which results in a highly active HER electrocatalyst in alkaline media. Massive defects and amorphous phase formation occur during plasma etching. More importantly, phase transformation of CoFe LDH into CoFe2O4 takes place. Additional introduction of Ce leads to more active sites and improved electrical conductivity, which provide an overpotential of 73 mV at a current density of 10 mA cm−2 for V-Ce/CoFe LDH. The experimental results match well with DFT calculations, proving that defect engineering, phase transformation, and electronic structure tailoring can result in a high efficiency of HER activity. Moreover, a cell constructed of CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH is capable of overall water splitting with a cell voltage as low as 1.65 V at 10 mA cm−2 and a remarkable long-term stability of 60 h. The plasma etching strategy can also be effective for other LDH-based electrocatalysts (e.g. NiFe LDH and NiCo LDH), which demonstrates the universality of the strategy for improving HER performance. This work provides a simple but feasible pathway for designing alkaline HER electrocatalysts based on advanced LDH materials.


Introduction

Electrochemical water splitting, consisting of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), has been explored and used for decades. Noble metals are so far the most efficient electrocatalyst (e.g. iridium dioxide/ruthenium dioxide for the OER, and platinum for the HER) owing to their low overpotential and fast kinetics.1–5 However, the high cost usually limits their large-scale applications. Therefore, it is necessary and urgent to design new efficient electrocatalysts with low cost and high earth abundance, instead of noble metal-based catalysts. Moreover, in the present 2-compartment electrolyzer cells, an optimized anode in a suitable anode electrolyte and an optimized cathode in a suitable cathode electrolyte are operated, e.g. in a membrane configuration. Operation in a one-electrolyte configuration would require the presence of a catalyst that is able provide HER and OER activity.6,7

In this context, recently, layered double hydroxide materials (e.g. NiFe LDH, CoFe LDH, and NiCo LDH) have attracted intensive interest towards the OER.8–13 However, the HER electrocatalytic activity is unsatisfactory, due to the poor conductivity and insufficient electrochemical active sites for this reaction. Oxygen vacancy engineering has been applied to promote OER and HER performances, owing to its beneficial effects on charge transfer and dissociation of water molecules.13,14 The absence of oxygen ions changes the electronic structure of the surface and thus transforms a semiconductor into a metal-like conductor, combined with dangling bonds and gap states. Another effect is the generation of low coordination metals that leads to active sites of metal oxides/hydroxides.1 Besides, altering the nature and density of oxygen vacancies in LDH materials exposes use of surface atoms.15–17 For example, Wang and coworkers reported that exfoliation of bulk CoFe LDH into ultrathin LDH nanosheets through Ar/water plasma etching resulted in the formation of multiple vacancies, including O, Co, and Fe vacancies, for improving the intrinsic OER activity.15,16 According to these treatments, the enhanced OER performances can be achieved for LDH-based catalysts in alkaline media. However, these electrocatalysts are still inert for the HER, let alone for overall water splitting. Therefore, it is still a challenge to achieve highly efficient HER activity of LDH-based materials, for developing bifunctional OER and HER electrocatalysts for overall one-pot water splitting.

We first perform a density functional theory (DFT) calculation to determine if the oxygen vacancies can influence the electronic structure of LDH and the surface adsorption energy of the reactants, and further the HER activity. Taking CoFe LDH material as an example, oxygen vacancies are constructed and Ce doping is considered and simulated by replacing O on the top surface. The optimized structures are shown in Fig. 1a. The HER activity is governed by the adsorption free energy of hydrogen (ΔGH*).1,18 For a fast proton/electron-transfer process and hydrogen release process, the ΔGH* value should be close to zero. Fig. 1b shows that the |ΔGH*| of CoFe LDH with oxygen vacancies (V-CoFe LDH) is 0.18 eV, which is much lower than that of CoFe LDH (0.55 eV). This indicates favorable H* adsorption kinetics on V-CoFe LDH for the HER. Besides, Ce insertion into CoFe LDH (Ce/CoFe LDH) exhibits a |ΔGH*| value of 0.26 eV. Further oxygen vacancies provide a |ΔGH*| value of 0.14 eV for V-Ce/CoFe LDH. This confirms that Ce doping and oxygen vacancies indeed can lower the energy barrier and facilitate the HER process, as well as enhance the HER activity.


image file: c9ta12768b-f1.tif
Fig. 1 (a) Structures and (b) free energy diagram of the HER over CoFe LDH, V-CoFe LDH, Ce/CoFe LDH, and V-Ce/CoFe LDH.

Motivated by the promising predictions, in this work, we synthesize CoFe LDH with oxygen vacancy defects by a plasma etching strategy and establish it as a highly active HER catalyst in alkaline media. In contrast to the oxygen vacancy engineering, the phase transformation of CoFe LDH into CoFe2O4 occurs. Further, introduction of Ce leads to more active sites and improved electrical conductivity, resulting in a high efficiency of HER activity for V-Ce/CoFe LDH. The experimental results agree well with the DFT calculation, proving that the oxygen vacancy defects in CoFe LDH or Ce/CoFe LDH lead to an outstanding HER performance. More importantly, the CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH is capable of overall water splitting with a cell voltage as low as 1.65 V at a current density of 10 mA cm−2 and remarkable long-term stability. These findings provide a simple but feasible pathway for the design of advanced LDH materials for energy conversion devices.

Results and discussion

Fig. 2a illustrates the synthesis of V-CoFe LDH and V-Ce/CoFe LDH. First, CoFe LDH is prepared by a hydrothermal method in an aqueous solution containing Co(NO3)2·6H2O and Fe(NO3)3·9H2O with a molar ratio of Co[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]Fe = 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1. The CoFe LDH is composed of 2 dimensional (2D) nanosheets with a thickness of 40–60 nm (Fig. S1a and S2). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images (Fig. S3) present the lattice fringes with distances of 0.26 nm, 0.23 nm, and 0.15 nm, matching well with the (012), (015), and (110) planes of CoFe LDH, respectively. Subsequently, the CoFe LDH was subjected to plasma etching to synthesize the defected CoFe LDH (denoted as V-CoFe LDH). As shown in Fig. S1b, many pores and small fragments are observed. TEM images present a nanosheet structure consisting of small nanocrystallites, and these small nanocrystallites are surrounded by amorphous shells (Fig. S4). Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images show that the height of V-CoFe LDH is approximately 5 nm, which is around 10 times thinner compared to a single layer of LDH (Fig. S2). This indicates that LDH could be exfoliated, in line with the results reported by Wang et al.17 We further induced Ce doping into the LDH as shown in Fig. 2a. No obvious change in morphology is observed compared to the CoFe LDH (Fig. 2b, S1c, and S5). Further N2 plasma treatment leads to abundant amorphous sites and defects detected in V-Ce/CoFe LDH (Fig. 2h and S6), which are similar to the V-CoFe LDH. The elemental mapping images from energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) confirm a homogeneous distribution of Co, Fe, Ce, and O species (Fig. 2j). Closely resembling the V-CoFe LDH, the thickness of V-Ce/CoFe LDH nanosheets decreases to ∼5 nm after the etching process (Fig. S7). Combined with the TEM results, abundant defects and amorphous phases caused by the plasma etching might induce a higher surface area and more active sites, facilitating the electron transfer and OH/H2O adsorption, subsequently further promoting the HER activity.
image file: c9ta12768b-f2.tif
Fig. 2 (a) Schematic illustration of synthesis of V-CoFe LDH and V-Ce/CoFe LDH; (b) SEM image, (c and d) TEM images, and (e) SAED pattern of Ce/CoFe LDH; (f) SEM image, (g and h) TEM images, and (i) SAED pattern of V-Ce/CoFe LDH; (j) TEM-EDS mapping images of V-Ce/CoFe LDH.

The crystalline structures of CoFe LDH and Ce/CoFe LDH without and with N2 plasma etching were investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD). The corresponding powders (Fig. S8) were examined, as the low amount of LDHs growing on nickel foam (NF) led to weak signals in XRD spectra. Fig. 3a shows that two phases composed of CoFe LDH (JCPDS 50-0235) and CoFe2O4 (JCPDS 01-1121) exist in the LDH powders.19 Through N2 plasma etching treatment, all diffraction peaks that can be assigned to (00l) (l = 3, 6 and 9), (015) and (018) in LDH decrease, while the CoFe2O4 remains unaffected by it. The different plasma etching times of XRD patterns were further investigated as shown in Fig. S9a. With increasing etching time, the diffraction peaks for the LDH finally disappear after 120 s. To probe the details of phase transformation, 2D XRD mappings were conducted as shown in Fig. S9b. The (00l) Debye-rings are clearly observed but disappear after 120 s, indicating that this structural transformation of LDH does not derive from a deformation of crystal orientation but from the shortening crystal coherent length. By using the collected X-ray diffraction of 2D mapping in the range of β = −22° to 22° (β: Debye-ring direction) for the LDH, we evaluate the lattice strain of LDH crystals based on William–Hall analysis (Fig. S9c and d). The lattice strain (ε) can be evaluated using the slope of a plot of Fhkl[thin space (1/6-em)]cos[thin space (1/6-em)]θ versus 4[thin space (1/6-em)]sin[thin space (1/6-em)]θ based on the following equation:20

 
Fhkl[thin space (1/6-em)]cos[thin space (1/6-em)]θ/λ = /D + 4ε[thin space (1/6-em)]sin[thin space (1/6-em)]θ(1)
where Fhkl is the full width at half-maximum intensity of diffraction peaks, θ is the diffraction angle, λ is the X-ray wavelength (CuKα: 1.5405 Å), D is the crystallite size, and k is Scherrer's constant (0.94). Both CoFe- and Ce/CoFe LDHs tend to increase the lattice strain with increasing plasma etching time, and the larger strain is introduced in the Ce/CoFe LDH compared to the CoFe LDH owing to Ce doping. This could be also related to the fragmented crystallite sizes of CoFe and Ce/CoFe LDHs (Fig. S4 and S6). Different from previous studies,15–17 except for the formation of defects, phase transformation is possibly one of the reasons for the adsorption of molecular H2O and the enabled water splitting reaction.


image file: c9ta12768b-f3.tif
Fig. 3 (a) XRD patterns of Ce/CoFe LDH and V-Ce/CoFe LDH powders; (b) O 1s and (c) Ce 3d XPS spectra, (d) Raman spectra, and (e) EPR results of Ce/CoFe LDH and V-Ce/CoFe LDH.

X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements were performed to probe chemical valence states in the samples. In the Co 2p spectra (Fig. S10 and S11), the peaks at 780.9 eV and 782.0 eV are ascribed to the Co3+ and Co2+. The Co3+ is partially reduced to Co2+, producing oxygen vacancies after plasma etching. The Fe 2p spectrum shows two peaks at 713.9 eV and 724.1 eV, indicating the presence of Fe3+ in the CoFe LDH. Compared to the pristine LDH, a new peak around 707.2 eV in Fe 2p of V-CoFe LDH (and V-Ce/CoFe LDH) appears (Fig. S10b and S11b), which can be ascribed to metallic Fe. Additionally, there is an obvious peak shift toward low binding energies after the plasma treatment. This suggests that the electronic structure in LDH becomes electron-enriched after etching.13,21 In Fig. 3b, the O 1s peak can be attributed to the metal–oxygen (M−O) bond in the lattice (529.3 eV), hydroxide bond (O–H) in the material (531.0 eV), and chemisorbed oxygen (O–O) on and within the surface (532.0 eV).15 There is a negligible change without or with plasma treatment in LDH (Fig. 3b and S10). However, a remarkable difference is detected for both CoFe- and Ce/CoFe LDHs after plasma etching (Fig. S10c and S11c). Namely, the O–H bond has a minute change before and after plasma treatment, while the intensities of M−O and absorbed O–O signals are increased after plasma etching. Liu et al.21 demonstrated that a LDH layer with tensile strain induced by ball-milling facilitated oxygenated intermediate adsorption. In our case, the increased O–O signal indicates an enhanced binding strength of the plasma-etched LDH surface to oxygenated intermediates.13,22,23 The M−O bond can be ascribed to the transformation of metal-hydroxide into metal oxy-hydroxide. Additionally, the coexistence of Ce3+ and Ce4+ is evidenced in the Ce 3d XPS spectra (Fig. 3c).

Raman spectroscopy was further used to investigate plane vibration modes of corresponding materials, and it reveals a clear difference for samples without and with plasma etching treatments. As shown in Fig. 3d and S12, the bands at 460 cm−1 and 526 cm−1 attributed to the metal–OH translation mode change to a broadened peak at 516–520 cm−1 after exfoliation, accompanied by a red shift, resulting from phonon softening induced by tensile strain.21,24,25 Based on d band theory, lattice strain is able to change the surface d bandwidth, which moves up or down the d band center to maintain a constant band filling state.21 The increased lattice strain in CoFe LDH is expected to upshift the d band center towards the Fermi level, leading to a less filled anti-bonding state and narrow band gap. Mott–Schottky measurements were carried out to determine the flat-band potential (Efb) of CoFe LDH. It demonstrates that the Efb of V-CoFe LDH is shifted from CoFe LDHs (Fig. S13), suggesting a better electron conductivity and a high intrinsic HER activity of plasma treated CoFe LDH. Furthermore, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy (Fig. 3e and S14) demonstrates that the V-CoFe LDH and V-Ce/CoFe LDH have more defects in the structure, and the signal (g = 1.99) reveals structural defects from oxygen vacancies, which is in accordance with a report of Zhao et al.13

Fig. 4a shows the linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) results of the corresponding electrocatalysts in 1 M KOH for their electrocatalytic HER activities. Various plasma power densities, plasma times, and Ce contents were optimized with respect to the best HER performance (Fig. S15 and S16). In Fig. 4a, the IR-corrected polarization curve of the V-CoFe LDH exhibits a lower overpotential compared to the pristine CoFe LDH. The optimum overpotential at 10 mA cm−2 is 95 mV lower than that of the pristine one (194 mV), indicating a significantly improved HER performance for plasma etched samples. Ce/CoFe LDH displays an overpotential of 156 mV at 10 mA cm−2. When the Ce/CoFe LDH was treated in N2 plasma, the overpotential further decreases to 73 mV at 10 mA cm−2, close to the Pt/C electrode (30 mV), which is one of the best results for the LDH-based electrocatalysts. Moreover, a much smaller slope (69 mV dec−1) of the Tafel plot is obtained for the V-Ce/CoFe LDH (Fig. 4b), suggesting an enhanced HER activity due to Ce doping, oxygen vacancies, and phase transformation. These results match well with the DFT calculation as shown in Fig. 1 – demonstrating a fast hydrogen release process to facilitate the HER process for the LDH layer after doping and plasma treatments.


image file: c9ta12768b-f4.tif
Fig. 4 HER performances of CoFe LDH, V-CoFe LDH, Ce/CoFe LDH, and V-Ce/CoFe LDH in 1 M KOH electrolyte: (a) IR-corrected polarization curves; (b) Tafel plots; (c) EIS; (d) capacitance current as a function of scan rate; (e) IR-corrected polarization curves of Ce/CoFe LDH plasma treated in various atmospheres; (f) IR-corrected polarization curves of V-Ce/CoFe LDH initially and after 4000 CV cycles.

To figure out the nickel foam effect and confirm the advantage of plasma etching treatment, Ce/CoFe LDH powder was prepared on carbon cloth for comparison. The V-Ce/CoFe LDH powder on carbon cloth has a lower overpotential than the pristine Ce/CoFe LDH powder (Fig. S17), providing a strong evidence that the plasma etching strategy is indeed beneficial for promoting the HER performance. Additionally, it indicates that the existence of CoFe2O4 has a positive effect on HER activity.

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) was carried out to obtain more insights into the electron-transfer kinetics of the HER. Fig. 4c shows that V-Ce/CoFe LDH has the smallest charge transfer resistance than other electrodes, implying favorable reaction kinetics. To explore the intrinsic catalytic activities of these catalysts, an electrochemical double-layer capacitance (Cdl) approach was applied to estimate the electrocatalytic active surface area (ECSA) from cyclic voltammetry curves at various scan rates over a small potential range (Fig. S18). Notably, the V-Ce/CoFe LDH electrode possesses the largest Cdl of 51.9 mF cm−2 compared to those of V-CoFe LDH (34.4 mF cm−2), Ce/CoFe LDH (4.7 mF cm−2), and CoFe LDH (2.0 mF cm−2) shown in Fig. 4d, showing indeed that a larger ECSA of V-Ce/CoFe LDH allows more exposed active sites to promote HER performance.

To rule out any direct plasma atmospheric effect on HER activity, Ce/CoFe LDH samples were treated in different plasma atmospheres (e.g. Ar and O2), and the corresponding LSV curves are shown in Fig. 4e. Clearly, the CoFe LDH treated in Ar or N2 plasma exhibits the improved HER activity, and even close values of overpotentials of 87 mV and 73 mV at 10 mA cm−2, respectively, while the sample treated in an oxygen atmosphere displays an increased overpotential (219 mV). XPS shows a very weak N 1s peak (Fig. S19) due to the short nitrogen plasma time (at 500 W for 10 s). N is possibly absorbed only on the top surface, so we exclude the effect of N doping in the LDH, but the oxygen effect points again to oxygen vacancies as the most important factor. We also measured the HER activity in neutral media (Fig. S20). Clearly, the V-Ce/CoFe LDH exhibits the best HER performance (212 mV at 10 mA cm−2) among them. Besides, a thick CoFe LDH material on nickel foam was prepared according to reported literature (Fig. S21)26 and then treated under the same plasma conditions; the overpotential is reduced from 208 mV (pristine) to 170 mV (Fig. S22). This further demonstrates that the plasma etching does promote the HER activity. However, this thick CoFe LDH did not have a good long-term stability owing to dissolution of LDH in the electrolyte. Additionally, a thick layer is more easily etched off during the plasma process, which leads to a relatively lower HER performance compared to the LDH material we used in this work. Thus, we choose a thin CoFe LDH layer with a strong adhesion to the substrate for an excellent electrocatalytic performance.

To identify if the plasma etching approach can be applied for other LDH materials, NiFe- and NiCo LDHs were grown on nickel foams and then treated under the same conditions. They also exhibit the enhanced HER performances after plasma etching (Fig. S23). Furthermore, the V-Ce/CoFe LDH was subjected to CV measurements for 4000 cycles, and the polarization curve has only a tiny change (Fig. 4f), suggesting a good long-term stability. No significant changes in morphology in SEM (inset of Fig. 4f) and TEM images (Fig. S24) are observed after CV, and the single nanosheet and defects still exist, further confirming a good durability. In the XPS spectra (Fig. S25), Co, Ni, and Ce are detected, while the O 1s peak after cycling can be mainly attributed to the hydroxide bond (M−OH), indicating that the structure has changed from metal oxy-hydroxides to metal hydroxides after the HER. This phenomenon has also been observed in other studies.27,28 Based on the results above, in our case, the HER performance of V-Ce/CoFe LDH is better than or comparable to that of reported non-noble CoFe-based electrocatalysts (Table S1). Therefore, this strategy clearly has a positive effect on the improvement of the HER electrocatalytic activity of LDH-based catalysts.

Finally, inspired by the superior HER performance of the V-Ce/CoFe LDH in alkaline media, we used the optimized CoFe LDH/V-Ce/CoFe LDH as the anode and cathode to construct a two-electrode electrolyzer for overall water splitting in a KOH electrolyte. The polarization curve in Fig. 5a shows that the CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH cell reaches a current density of 10 mA cm−2 at an overpotential of 1.65 V. Such a performance is better than the values reported for CoFe-based electrocatalysts. Furthermore, the CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH cell displays an excellent electrochemical durability with no noticeable decrease at a constant applied potential of 1.65 V for 60 h (Fig. 5b). The generated O2 and H2 were further measured quantitatively, and the ratio is close to 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]2 (Fig. S26).


image file: c9ta12768b-f5.tif
Fig. 5 (a) Performance of the full water-splitting device using the CoFe LDH as the anode and V-Ce/CoFe LDH as the cathode; (b) chronoamperometric curve of CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH for full water splitting with an overpotential of 10 mA cm−2 for 60 h. The inset of b shows the optical photograph of generation gases.

In this work, the exfoliation process leads to an increase of reactive sites in the holes with more dangling bonds and lower coordination numbers. The increasing number of reactive sites from higher specific surface area further leads to the rearrangement of the electronic configuration. Based on the first-principle calculation and experimental results, the high HER activity of V-Ce/CoFe LDH originates from the synergistic effects of large ECSA, oxygen vacancies, and improved electrical conductivity, facilitating fast charge transfer induced by the plasma etching process.29 More importantly, phase transformation processes occurred during this treatment (this effect is the first time reported in this work). For the CoFe- and Ce/CoFe LDH powders, two phases of CoFe LDH and CoFe2O4 both exist, and the CoFe LDH transforms into CoFe2O4 with increasing plasma time. For the CoFe LDH grown on nickel foam, less CoFe2O4 is possibly formed, but with plasma etching, the LDH phase is changed to an oxy-hydroxide phase as confirmed by XPS and Raman analysis (Fig. S10c, S11c, and S12). Both CoFe LDH and Ce/CoFe LDH tend to increase the lattice strain with increasing plasma etching time, and a larger strain is introduced in the Ce/CoFe LDH as compared to the CoFe LDH. Therefore, it is deduced that the plasma etching strategy not only induces vacancies and defects, but can also induce beneficial phase transformations.

Conclusions

In summary, we synthesize CoFe LDH with oxygen-vacancy defects by nitrogen plasma etching and demonstrate the resulting material as a highly active HER catalyst in alkaline media. The as-prepared V-CoFe LDH was further modified with Ce doping. It maintains the two-dimensional nanosheet structure but with enlarged ECSA and active sites, and with better electrical conductivity. During the plasma etching, a phase transformation of CoFe LDH into CoFe2O4 further improves the electrocatalytic reaction kinetics. The resulting V-Ce/CoFe LDH shows a high activity (73 mV at 10 mA cm−2) and a good durability in 1 M KOH electrolyte. Such CoFe LDH‖V-Ce/CoFe LDH is capable of overall water splitting with a cell voltage as low as 1.65 V at 10 mA cm−2 and outstanding long-term stability. Our work provides a new strategy to the realization of LDH-based electrocatalysts with excellent HER performances.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

Acknowledgements

L. W. designed the experiment. S. L. performed the materials synthesis and characterization. J. Z., M. S., Z. M., K. H., and X. L. assisted the experiment. T. N. performed the XRD and 2D XRD mapping experiment and analysed the data. L. W. wrote the manuscript. L. W., T. N., and P. S. corrected the manuscript. P. S. helped to interpret the results. All authors approved the manuscript. We acknowledge the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundations of China (No. 51802320 and 21965024), the start-up funding from Inner Mongolia University (21300-5195102), and the Opening Project of Key Laboratory of Materials Processing and Mold from Zhengzhou University.

Notes and references

  1. L. Han, S. Dong and E. Wang, Adv. Mater., 2016, 28, 9266–9291 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  2. J. Liu, D. Zhu, Y. Zheng, A. Vasileff and S.-Z. Qiao, ACS Catal., 2018, 8, 6707–6732 CrossRef CAS.
  3. V. Vij, S. Sultan, A. M. Harzandi, A. Meena, J. N. Tiwari, W.-G. Lee, T. Yoon and K. S. Kim, ACS Catal., 2017, 7, 7196–7225 CrossRef CAS.
  4. Z. Chen, X. Duan, W. Wei, S. Wang and B.-J. Ni, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2019, 7, 14971–15005 RSC.
  5. J. F. Callejas, C. G. Read, C. W. Roske, N. S. Lewis and R. E. Schaak, Chem. Mater., 2016, 28, 6017–6044 CrossRef CAS.
  6. R. Yang, Y. Zhou, Y. Xing, D. Li, D. Jiang, M. Chen, W. Shi and S. Yuan, Appl. Catal., B, 2019, 253, 131–139 CrossRef CAS.
  7. Y. Li, M. Lu, Y. Wu, H. Xu, J. Gao and J. Yao, Adv. Mater. Interfaces, 2019, 6, 1900290 CrossRef.
  8. G. Rajeshkhanna, T. I. Singh, N. H. Kim and J. H. Lee, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2018, 10, 42453–42468 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  9. T. Zhang, L. Hang, Y. Sun, D. Men, X. Li, L. Wen, X. Lyu and Y. Li, Nanoscale Horiz., 2019, 4, 1132–1138 RSC.
  10. P. F. Liu, S. Yang, B. Zhang and H. G. Yang, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2016, 8, 34474–34481 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  11. X. Wang, Y. Yang, L. Diao, Y. Tang, F. He, E. Liu, C. He, C. Shi, J. Li, J. Sha, S. Ji, P. Zhang, L. Ma and N. Zhao, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2018, 10, 35145–35153 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  12. H. Xu, B. Wang, C. Shan, P. Xi, W. Liu and Y. Tang, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2018, 10, 6336–6345 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  13. M. Asnavandi, Y. Yin, Y. Li, C. Sun and C. Zhao, ACS Energy Lett., 2018, 3, 1515–1520 CrossRef CAS.
  14. L. Xu, Q. Jiang, Z. Xiao, X. Li, J. Huo, S. Wang and L. Dai, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed., 2016, 55, 5277–5281 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  15. Y. Wang, Y. Zhang, Z. Liu, C. Xie, S. Feng, D. Liu, M. Shao and S. Wang, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed., 2017, 56, 5867–5871 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  16. R. Liu, Y. Wang, D. Liu, Y. Zou and S. Wang, Adv. Mater., 2017, 29, 1701546 CrossRef PubMed.
  17. Y. Wang, C. Xie, Z. Zhang, D. Liu, R. Chen and S. Wang, Adv. Funct. Mater., 2018, 28, 1703363 CrossRef.
  18. S. Niu, W.-J. Jiang, Z. Wei, T. Tang, J. Ma, J.-S. Hu and L.-J. Wan, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2019, 141, 7005–7013 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  19. A. E. Arrassi, Z. Liu, M. V. Evers, N. Blanc, G. Bendt, S. Saddeler, D. Tetzlaff, D. Pohl, C. Damm, S. Schulz and K. Tschulik, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2019, 141, 9197–9201 CrossRef PubMed.
  20. V. Mote, Y. Purushotham and B. Dole, Journal of Theoretical and Applied Physics, 2012, 6, 6 CrossRef.
  21. D. Zhou, S. Wang, Y. Jia, X. Xiong, H. Yang, S. Liu, J. Tang, J. Zhang, D. Liu, L. Zheng, Y. Kuang, X. Sun and B. Liu, Angew. Chem., 2019, 131, 746–750 CrossRef.
  22. H. B. Tao, L. Fang, J. Chen, H. B. Yang, J. Gao, J. Miao, S. Chen and B. Liu, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2016, 138, 9978–9985 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  23. A. Tamilselvan, S. Balakumar, M. Sakar, C. Nayek, P. Murugavel and K. Saravana Kumar, Dalton Trans., 2014, 43, 5731–5738 RSC.
  24. V. R. R. Cunha, P. A. D. Petersen, M. B. Goncalves, H. M. Petrilli, C. Taviot-Gueho, F. Leroux, M. L. A. Temperini and V. R. L. Constantino, Chem. Mater., 2012, 24, 1415–1425 CrossRef CAS.
  25. G. Tsoukleri, J. Parthenios, K. Papagelis, R. Jalil, A. C. Ferrari, A. K. Geim, K. S. Novoselov and C. Galiotis, Small, 2009, 5, 2397–2402 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  26. R. Yang, Y. Zhou, Y. Xing, D. Li, D. Jiang, M. Chen, W. Shi and S. Yuan, Appl. Catal., B, 2019, 253, 131 CrossRef CAS.
  27. J. Huang, Q. Shang, Y. Huang, F. Tang, Q. Zhang, Q. Liu, S. Jiang, F. Hu, W. Liu, Y. Luo, T. Yao, Y. Jiang, Z. Pan, Z. Sun and S. Wei, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed., 2016, 55, 2137–2141 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  28. Q. Zhang, S. Zhang, Y. Tian and S. Zhan, ACS Sustainable Chem. Eng., 2018, 6, 15411–15418 CrossRef CAS.
  29. Z. Yuan, S.-M. Bak, P. Li, Y. Jia, L. Zheng, Y. Zhou, L. Bai, E. Hu, X.-Q. Yang, Z. Cai, Y. Sun and X. Sun, ACS Energy Lett., 2019, 4, 1412–1418 CrossRef CAS.

Footnote

Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9ta12768b

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Click here to see how this site uses Cookies. View our privacy policy here.