The development of sufficiently effective catalysts with extremely superior performance for electrocatalytic hydrogen production still remains a formidable challenge, especially in acidic media. Here, we report ultrasmall high-entropy alloy (us-HEA) nanoparticles (NPs) with the best-level performance for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). The us-HEA (NiCoFePtRh) NPs show an average diameter of 1.68 nm, which is the smallest size in the reported HEAs. The atomic structure, coordinational structure, and electronic structure of the us-HEAs were comprehensively clarified. The us-HEA/C achieves an ultrahigh mass activity of 28.3 A mg −1 noble metals at −0.05 V (vs the reversible hydrogen electrode, RHE) for HER in 0.5 M H 2 SO 4 solution, which is 40.4 and 74.5 times higher than those of the commercial Pt/C and Rh/C catalysts, respectively. Moreover, the us-HEA/C demonstrates an ultrahigh turnover frequency of 30.1 s −1 at 50 mV overpotential (41.8 times higher than that of the Pt/C catalyst) and excellent stability with no decay after 10 000 cycles. Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy and theoretical calculations reveal the actual active sites, tunable electronic structures, and a synergistic effect among five elements, which endow significantly enhanced HER activity. This work not only engineers a general and scalable strategy for synthesizing us-HEA NPs and elucidates the complex structural information and catalytic mechanisms of multielement HEA system in depth, but also highlights HEAs as sufficiently advanced catalysts and accelerates the research of HEAs in energy-related applications.
Simultaneously synthesizing and structuring atomically thick or ultrathin 2D non-precious metal nanocrystal may offer a new class of materials to replace the state-of-art noble-metal electrocatalysts; however, the synthetic strategy is the bottleneck which should be urgently solved. Here we report the synthesis of an ultrathin nickel nanosheet array (Ni-NSA) through in situ topotactic reduction from Ni(OH)2 array precursors. The Ni nanosheets showed a single-crystalline lamellar structure with only ten atomic layers in thickness and an exposed (111) facet. Combined with a superaerophobic (low bubble adhesive) arrayed structure the Ni-NSAs exhibited a dramatic enhancement on both activity and stability towards the hydrazine-oxidation reaction (HzOR) relative to platinum. Furthermore, the partial oxidization of Ni-NSAs in ambient atmosphere resulted in effective water-splitting electrocatalysts for the hydrogen-evolution reaction (HER).
Ultrathin 2D metal alloy nanomaterials have great potential applications but their controlled syntheses are limited to few noble metal based systems. Herein NixCo1−
x alloy nanosheets with ultrathin (sub‐3 nm) single‐crystalline 2D structure are synthesized through a topochemical reduction method. Moreover, the optimized composition Ni0.6Co0.4 alloy nanosheets array exhibits excellent performances for hydrazine oxidation reaction and direct hydrazine fuel cells.
Li-rich layered oxide cathode materials show high capacities in lithium-ion batteries owing to the contribution of the oxygen redox reaction. However, structural accommodation of this reaction usually results in O–O dimerization, leading to oxygen release and poor electrochemical performance. In this study, we propose a new structural response mechanism inhibiting O–O dimerization for the oxygen redox reaction by tuning the local symmetry around the oxygen ions. Compared with regular Li2RuO3, the structural response of the as-prepared local-symmetry-tuned Li2RuO3 to the oxygen redox reaction involves the telescopic O–Ru–O configuration rather than O–O dimerization, which inhibits oxygen release, enabling significantly enhanced cycling stability and negligible voltage decay. This discovery of the new structural response mechanism for the oxygen redox reaction will provide a new scope for the strategy of enhancing the anionic redox stability, paving unexplored pathways toward further development of high capacity Li-rich layered oxides.
The ORCID identification number(s) for the author(s) of this article can be found under https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202000190.
The search for new high-performance and low-cost cathode materials for Li-ion batteries is a challenging issue in materials research. Commonly used cobalt-or nickel-based cathodes suffer from limited resources and safety problems that greatly restrict their large-scale application, especially for electric vehicles and large-scale energy storage. Here, a novel Li-Mn-O Li-rich cathode material with R m3 symmetry is developed via intralayer Li/Mn disordering in the Mn-layer. Due to the special atomic arrangement and higher R m 3 symmetry with respect to the C2/m symmetry, the oxygen redox activity is modulated and the Li in the Li-layer is preferentially thermodynamically extracted from the crystal structure instead of Li in the Mn-layer. The as-obtained material delivers a reversible capacity of over 300 mAh g −1 at 25 mA g −1 and rate capability of up to 260 mAh g −1 at 250 mA g −1 within 2.0-4.8 V. The excellent performance is attributed to its highly structural reversibility, mitigation of Jahn-Teller distortion, lower bandgap, and faster Li-ion 2D channels during the lithium-ion de/intercalation process. This material is not only a promising cathode material candidate but also raises new possibilities for the design of low-cost and high-performance cathode materials.
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