Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.58, No.11, 7615-7627, 2019
Arousing the Reactive Fe Sites in Pyrite (FeS2) via Integration of Electronic Structure Reconfiguration and in Situ Electrochemical Topotactic Transformation for Highly Efficient Oxygen Evolution Reaction
Despite significant advances in the development of highly efficient and robust oxygen evolution reaction (OER) electrocatalysts to replace noble-metal catalysts, commercializing OER catalysts with high catalytic activity for sustainable development still remains a great challenge. Especially, transition-metal Fe-based OER catalysts, despite their earth-abundant, cost-efficient, and environmentally benign superiorities over Co- and Ni-based materials, have received relatively insufficient attention because of their poor apparent OER activities. Herein, by rational design, we report Ni-modified pyrite (FeS2) spheres with yolk-shell structure that could serve as pre-electrocatalyst precursors to induce a highly active nickel-iron oxyhydroxide via in situ electrochemical topological transformation under the OER process. Notably, as confirmed by the results of X-ray absorption spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, Ni doping could effectively regulate the intrinsic electronic structure of FeS2 to realize a semiconductor-to-semimetal transition, which endows FeS2 with dramatically improved conductivity and water adsorption ability, providing prequisites for subsequent topological transformation. Moreover, systematic post-characterizations further reveal that the optimal Ni-FeS2-0.5 sample completely converts to amorphous Ni-doped FeOOH via an in situ electrochemical transformation with yolk-shell structure well-preserved under the OER conditions. The electronic structure modulation combined with electrochemical topotactic transformation strategies well stimulate the reactive Fe sites in Ni-FeS2-0.5, which show impressively low overpotentials of 250 and 326 mV to drive the current densities (j) of 10 and 100 mA cm(-2), respectively, and a Tafel slope as small as 34 mV dec(-1) for the OER process. When assembled as a water electrolyzer for the overall water splitting, Ni-FeS2-0.5 can display a low voltage of 1.55 V to drive a current density of 10 mA cm(-2), outperforming most of the transition-metal-based bifunctional electrocatalysts to date. This work may provide new insight into the rational design of other high-performance Fe-based OER electrocatalysts and inspire the exploration of cost-effective, ecofriendly electrocatalysts to meet the demand for future sustainable development.