In Situ Modulation of Oxygen Vacancies on 2D Metal Hydroxide Organic Frameworks for High‐Efficiency Oxygen Evolution Reaction

Author:

Ge Kai1,Zhao Yi1,Hu Yidong1,Wang Zhuozhi1,Wang Jingjing1,Yang Mingtao1,Cui He1,Yang Yongfang1ORCID,Zhu Lei2,Shen Boxiong13

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemical Engineering Hebei University of Technology Tianjin 300130 P. R. China

2. Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering Case Western Reserve University Cleveland OH 44106 USA

3. School of Energy and Environmental Engineering Hebei University of Technology Tianjin 300130 P. R. China

Abstract

AbstractThe discovery of non‐precious catalysts for replacing the precious metal of ruthenium in the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) represents a key step in reducing the cost of green hydrogen production. The 2D d‐MHOFs, a new 2D materials with controllable oxygen vacancies formed by controlling the degree of coordination bridging between metal hydroxyl oxide and BDC ligands are synthesized at room temperature, exhibit excellent OER properties with low overpotentials of 207  mV at 10 mA cm−2. High‐resolution transmission electron microscopy images and density functional theory calculations demonstrate that the introduction of oxygen vacancy sites leads to a lattice distortion and charge redistribution in the catalysts, enhancing the OER activity of 2D d‐MHOFs comprehensively. Synchrotron radiation and in situ Raman/Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy indicate that part of oxygen defect sites on the surface of 2D d‐MHOFs are prone to transition to highly active metal hydroxyl oxides during the OER process. This work provides a mild strategy for scalable preparation of 2D d‐MHOFs nanosheets with controllable oxygen defects, reveals the relationship between oxygen vacancies and OER performance, and offers a profound insight into the basic process of structural transformation in the OER process.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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