Abstract
The storage of renewable energy is a pressing challenge to overcome in the transition towards a power grid based on plentiful, yet intermittent energy supplies. The renewables-driven electrolysis ofwater to formhydrogen fuel is an attractive avenue, but requires better oxygen-evolution reaction (OER) catalysts to be feasible at scale. RuO2 is touted as one of the superior OER catalysts, but only under acidic conditions – RuO2 electrocatalysts suffer
from poor stability under alkaline conditions. In this work, we evaluate three photodeposited RuO2 OER electrocatalysts, all prepared via a scalable photodeposition method. Based on electrochemical and spectroscopic studies (x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and
X-ray absorption spectroscopy) our main findings are that nanocrystalline RuO2 catalysts outperform their amorphous counterpart, and are stable under alkaline (0.1 M KOH) conditions. This works thus lifts a major hurdle towards the use of RuO2 for alkaline water
electrolysis.
Supplementary materials
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Supplementary Information
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experimental methods and supporting data
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