Cobalt Phosphide Nanoarrays on a Borate-modified Nickel Foam Substrate As an Efficient Dual-electrocatalyst for Overall Water Splitting
Overview
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Developing efficient non-noble metal dual-functional electrocatalysts for overall water splitting is essential for the production of green hydrogen. Given the significant advantages of self-supporting electrodes, regulating the growth of self-supporting nanoarrays on a conductive substrate is conducive to improving the electrocatalytic activity. In this work, aligned cobalt phosphide (CoP) nanowire arrays grown on borate-modified Ni foam substrate (CoP/R-NF) were utilized as a bifunctional electrocatalyst for both hydrogen evolution reactions (HER) and oxygen evolution reactions (OER) in alkaline solution. The borate interfacial layer regulated the growth behavior of CoP nanowires, promoting a tip-enhanced electric field effect, facilitating an enhanced bimetallic synergistic effect. The CoP/R-NF electrode showed substantial catalytic activity for HER (η = 35 mV, 70 mV dec) and OER (241 mV, 32 mV dec). Moreover, a low cell voltage of 1.50 V to drive 10 mA cm current density for overall water-splitting was achieved in an alkaline water electrolyzer, with long-term durability of 200 h at 100 mA cm, indicating the potential application of CoP/R-NF as a bifunctional catalyst for clean and renewable energy utilization. Such a synthetic strategy could pave the way for the development of non-noble bifunctional electrocatalysts for comprehensive water splitting.