Dynamics of Highly Active Ln3IrO7 Catalysts for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction in Acid

Author:

Edgington Jane1ORCID,Vicente Rafael2ORCID,Vispute Sejal1ORCID,Li Ruihan1ORCID,Sweers Matthew E.1ORCID,Sullivan Simone R.1ORCID,Fernandez Pablo S.2ORCID,Seitz Linsey C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering Northwestern University Evanston IL 60208‐3113 USA

2. Chemistry Institute and Center for Innovation on New Energies (CINE) Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) Campinas São Paulo 13083‐970 Brazil

Abstract

AbstractAn improved understanding of catalyst dynamics for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in acid is critical for informing the development of highly efficient, stable, and cost‐effective OER catalysts for proton exchange membrane water electrolysis applications. Herein highly tunable, active, and dynamic Ir 5+ materials are studied, Ln3IrO7 (Ln = Pr, Nd, Sm, and Eu). Leveraging a combination of in situ and ex situ characterization, as well as an advanced mercury underpotential deposition technique for Ir surface site quantification, the dynamic nature of Ln3IrO7 materials throughout electrochemical activation under OER conditions is characterized. The trends are elucidated between intrinsic OER activity, surface Ir site quantity, and metal site dissolution behavior as tuned by the Ln site's atomic number. A critical relationship is uncovered to show that maintenance of excellent OER activity throughout performance testing is correlated with a catalysts’ ability to preserve a high degree of Ir enrichment, where heightened stability of Ir sites interestingly parallels reduced stability of Ln sites throughout testing. It is found that as the Ln site's atomic number is decreased, the materials’ intrinsic OER performance improves, due to an increased thermodynamic driving force for Ln dissolution, which is hypothesized to enable the maintenance of highly active Ir‐based surface motifs.

Funder

Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems

National Science Foundation

Northwestern University

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Division of Engineering Education and Centers

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Argonne National Laboratory

Division of Materials Research

Division of Electrical, Communications and Cyber Systems

Publisher

Wiley

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