Plasma-assisted rhodium incorporation in nickel–iron sulfide nanosheets: enhanced catalytic activity and the Janus mechanism for overall water splitting†
Abstract
NiFe catalysts show compelling oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity in alkaline solution but their hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity is limited. In this work Rh was incorporated in Fe-doped Ni3S2 nanosheets with the assistance of hydrogen plasma to significantly enhance the HER/OER catalytic activity. The resultant catalyst, p-Rh/Fe-Ni3S2/NF, was composed of Rh/Rh2S3 heterostructured clusters embedded in Fe-Ni3S2 nanosheets; it needs overpotentials of only 108 and 237 mV to achieve HER and OER currents of 100 mA cm−2, respectively, and drives overall water splitting at 1.79 V with a current of 100 mA cm−2 as a bifunctional catalyst. Post-characterization and density functional theory (DFT) calculation reveal its operando evolution behavior and a unique Janus catalytic mechanism for the HER and OER. For the HER, a Rh/Rh2S3 heterointerface with strong H2O adsorption energy and optimal H adsorption energy is the active site; in the OER, it experiences surface transformation under operando conditions; an in situ formed Rh/Fe-doped NiOOH layer with strengthened binding of *O facilitates the rate determining step of *O formation to accelerate the OER process. Hydrogen plasma treatment not only helps partially reduce Rh to form HER-active Rh/Rh2S3 heterostructures but also induces rich defects/vacancies to facilitate surface reconstruction/phase transformation to form an active co-doped NiOOH phase under OER conditions. This work may shed light on the promotive role of noble metals on NiFe-based catalysts for water splitting.
- This article is part of the themed collection: FOCUS: Metal and Metal-Containing Clusters