1 research outputs found
Strong Metal–Phosphide Interactions in Core–Shell Geometry for Enhanced Electrocatalysis
Rational
design of multicomponent material structures with strong interfacial
interactions enabling enhanced electrocatalysis represents an attractive
but underdeveloped paradigm for creating better catalysts for important
electrochemical energy conversion reactions. In this work, we report
metal–phosphide core–shell nanostructures as a new model
electrocatalyst material system where the surface electronic states
of the shell phosphide and its interactions with reaction intermediates
can be effectively influenced by the core metal to achieve higher
catalytic activity. The strategy is demonstrated by the design and
synthesis of iron–iron phosphide (Fe@FeP) core–shell nanoparticles on
carbon nanotubes (CNTs) where we find that the electronic interactions
between the metal and the phosphide components increase the binding
strength of hydrogen adatoms toward the optimum. As a consequence,
the Fe@FeP/CNT material exhibits exceptional catalytic activity for
the hydrogen evolution reaction, only requiring overpotentials of
53–110 mV to reach catalytic current densities of 10–100
mA cm<sup>–2</sup>