Efficient electrochemical water oxidation in neutral and near-neutral systems with a nanoscale silver-oxide catalyst

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Abstract

In electrocatalytic water splitting systems pursuing for renewable energy using sunlight, developing robust, stable and easily accessible materials operating under mild chemical conditions is pivotal. We present here a unique nanoparticulate type silver-oxide (AgOx-NP) based robust and highly stable electrocatalyst for efficient water oxidation. The AgOx-NP is generated in situ in a HCO3-/CO2 system under benign conditions. Micrographs show that they exhibit a nanoscale box type squared nano-bipyramidal configuration. The oxygen generation is initiated at low overpotential, and a sustained O2 evolution current density of >1.1 mA cm-2 is achieved during prolonged-period water electrolysis. The AgOx-NP electrocatalyst performs exceptionally well in metal-ion free neutral or near-neutral carbonate, phosphate and borate buffers relative to recently reported Co-oxide and Ni-oxide based heterogeneous electrocatalysts, which are unstable in metal-ion free electrolytes and tend to deactivate with time and lose catalytic performance during long-term experimental tests.

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Joya, K. S., Ahmad, Z., Joya, Y. F., Garcia-Esparza, A. T., & De Groot, H. J. M. (2016). Efficient electrochemical water oxidation in neutral and near-neutral systems with a nanoscale silver-oxide catalyst. Nanoscale, 8(32), 15033–15040. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6nr03147a

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