Feng Jing, Shibo Du, Zhiheng Ding, Xuepeng Chen, Zhen Liu, Hongying Mei
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Electrocatalytic hydrogen production holds great promise as a means of generating green energy. In order to achieve the large-scale industrial application, low-cost and highly efficient electrocatalysts are the key factors. The open mesh nanosheet array structure and doping can expose more active sites and effectively enhance electron transport during the hydrogen evolution reaction. Herein, a simple nanostructured electrocatalyst consisting of nitrogen-doped NiS2 nanosheets array grown on carbon fiber cloth (N-NiS2/CF) has been constructed. Benefiting from its nitrogen-doped, nanosheets array and intrinsic pyrite like structure, the optical N-NiS2/CF electrode exhibits relatively excellent catalytic activity and long-time stability in both alkaline and acidic media. Especially, to drive the current density of 10 mA cm−2, only an overpotential of 96 mV and 163 mV were needed in 1.0 M KOH and 0.5 M H2SO4, respectively. The as obtained N-NiS2/CF can be a promising non-noble-metal electrocatalyst for practical hydrogen production application.
期刊介绍:
Transition Metal Chemistry is an international journal designed to deal with all aspects of the subject embodied in the title: the preparation of transition metal-based molecular compounds of all kinds (including complexes of the Group 12 elements), their structural, physical, kinetic, catalytic and biological properties, their use in chemical synthesis as well as their application in the widest context, their role in naturally occurring systems etc.
Manuscripts submitted to the journal should be of broad appeal to the readership and for this reason, papers which are confined to more specialised studies such as the measurement of solution phase equilibria or thermal decomposition studies, or papers which include extensive material on f-block elements, or papers dealing with non-molecular materials, will not normally be considered for publication. Work describing new ligands or coordination geometries must provide sufficient evidence for the confident assignment of structural formulae; this will usually take the form of one or more X-ray crystal structures.