Exceptionally active iridium evolved from a pseudo-cubic perovskite for oxygen evolution in acid

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Abstract

Exploring robust catalysts for water oxidation in acidic electrolyte is challenging due to the limited material choice. Iridium (Ir) is the only active element with a high resistance to the acid corrosion during water electrolysis. However, Ir is rare, and its large-scale application could only be possible if the intrinsic activity of Ir could be greatly enhanced. Here, a pseudo-cubic SrCo 0.9 Ir 0.1 O 3-δ perovskite, containing corner-shared IrO6 octahedrons, is designed. The Ir in the SrCo 0.9 Ir 0.1 O 3-δ catalyst shows an extremely high intrinsic activity as reflected from its high turnover frequency, which is more than two orders of magnitude higher than that of IrO 2 . During the electrochemical cycling, a surface reconstruction, with Sr and Co leaching, over SrCo 0.9 Ir 0.1 O 3-δ occurs. Such reconstructed surface region, likely contains a high amount of structural domains with corner-shared and under-coordinated IrO x octahedrons, is responsible for the observed high activity.

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Chen, Y., Li, H., Wang, J., Du, Y., Xi, S., Sun, Y., … Xu, Z. J. (2019). Exceptionally active iridium evolved from a pseudo-cubic perovskite for oxygen evolution in acid. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08532-3

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