Mixed Close-Packed Cobalt Molybdenum Nitrides as Non-noble Metal Electrocatalysts for the Hydrogen Evolution Reaction

Abstract

A two-step solid-state reaction for preparing cobalt molybdenum nitride with a nanoscale morphology has been used to produce a highly active and stable electrocatalyst for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) under acidic conditions that achieves an <i>i</i>R-corrected current density of 10 mA cm<sup>–2</sup> at −0.20 V vs RHE at low catalyst loadings of 0.24 mg/cm<sup>2</sup> in rotating disk experiments under a H<sub>2</sub> atmosphere. Neutron powder diffraction and pair distribution function (PDF) studies have been used to overcome the insensitivity of X-ray diffraction data to different transition-metal nitride structural polytypes and show that this cobalt molybdenum nitride crystallizes in space group <i>P</i>6<sub>3</sub>/<i>mmc</i> with lattice parameters of <i>a</i> = 2.85176(2) Å and <i>c</i> = 10.9862(3) Å and a formula of Co<sub>0.6</sub>Mo<sub>1.4</sub>N<sub>2</sub>. This space group results from the four-layered stacking sequence of a mixed close-packed structure with alternating layers of transition metals in octahedral and trigonal prismatic coordination and is a structure type for which HER activity has not previously been reported. Based on the accurate bond distances obtained from time-of-flight neutron diffraction data, it is determined that the octahedral sites contain a mixture of divalent Co and trivalent Mo, while the trigonal prismatic sites contain Mo in a higher oxidation state. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies confirm that at the sample surface nitrogen is present and N–H moieties are abundant

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