Optimizing interfacial electronic coupling with metal oxide to activate inert polyaniline for superior electrocatalytic hydrogen generation

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Abstract

Tuning and optimization of electronic structures and related reaction energetics are critical toward the rational design of efficient electrocatalysts. Herein, experimental and theoretical calculation demonstrate the originally inert N site within polyaniline (PANI) can be activated for hydrogen evolution by proper d-π interfacial electronic coupling with metal oxide. As a result, the as-synthesized WO3 assemblies@PANI via a facile redox-induced assembly and in situ polymerization, exhibits the electrocatalytic production of hydrogen better than other control samples including W18O49@PANI and most of the reported nobel-metal-free electrocatalysts, with low overpotential of 74 mV at 10 mA·cm−2 and small Tafel slope of 46 mV·dec−1 in 0.5M H2SO4 (comparable to commercial Pt/C). The general efficacy of this methodology is also validated by extension to other metal oxides such as MoO3 with similar improvements.

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Huang, Z. F., Song, J., Du, Y., Dou, S., Sun, L., Chen, W., … Wang, X. (2019). Optimizing interfacial electronic coupling with metal oxide to activate inert polyaniline for superior electrocatalytic hydrogen generation. Carbon Energy, 1(1), 77–84. https://doi.org/10.1002/cey2.3

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