Abstract
The design of efficient and stable oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysts-based earth-abundant metal precursors is crucial for large-scale energy conversion and storage. To-date, many catalyst materials are limited by poor stability in harsh oxidative conditions. Thus, much research is targeted at developing materials that can operate under demanding OER conditions. One promising approach is the in-situ formation of catalysts which are inherently stable under the oxidizing, alkaline conditions often used in OER studies. Here, we report how mixed metal sulfide precursors (i.e. CoMo2S4 and FeS2) which give the low overpotentials (307 mV at j = 10 mA·cm-2) at the beginning of catalysis, are converted in-situ to give a highly stable composite OER catalyst under alkaline OER conditions (1 M aqueous KOH solution, pH = 13.8). Mechanistic studies reveal that under operation, the precursor materials are converted to γ-CoOOH nanofibers and Co2O3 nanoparticles, both well-known prototype OER catalysts. The report demonstrates that the presence of crystalline mix metal sulfide precursors is critical for the simultaneous in-situ formation of the active catalysts, highlighting that use of these earth-abundant minerals might offer an economically and chemically viable route for scalable catalyst development.
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The supplementary information contains supporting detailed experimental, characterization, and analytical data.
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