AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydrogen is seen as a promising clean fuel, but its reliance on freshwater poses sustainability challenges, leading researchers to explore seawater as a solution despite its corrosive properties.
  • A novel catalyst made of nitrogen-doped NiMo P sheets is engineered to enhance catalytic activity and stability, featuring large pores that improve mass transfer and optimize electronic properties.
  • The N-NiMo P catalyst exhibits excellent performance in hydrogen production, requiring minimal energy input and demonstrating effectiveness in both freshwater and seawater conditions, highlighting its potential for low-cost hydrogen generation.

Article Abstract

Hydrogen is emerging as an alternative clean fuel; however, its dependency on freshwater will be a threat to a sustainable environment. Seawater, an unlimited source, can be an alternative, but its salt-rich nature causes corrosion and introduces several competing reactions, hindering its use. To overcome these, a unique catalyst composed of porous sheets of nitrogen-doped NiMo P (N-NiMo P) having a sheet size of several microns is designed. The presence of large homogenous pores in the basal plane of these sheets makes them catalytically more active and ensures faster mass transfer. The introduction of N and Ni into MoP significantly tunes the electronic density of Mo, surface chemistry, and metal-non-metal bond lengths, optimizing surface energies, creating new active sites, and increasing electrical conductivity. The presence of metal-nitrogen bonds and surface polyanions increases the stability and improves anti-corrosive properties against chlorine chemistry. Ultimately, the N-NiMo P sheets show remarkable performance as it only requires overpotentials of 23 and 35 mV for hydrogen evolution reaction, and it catalyzes full water splitting at 1.52 and 1.55 V to achieve 10 mA cm in 1 m KOH and seawater, respectively. Hence, structural and compositional control can make catalysts effective in realizing low-cost hydrogen directly from seawater.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202207310DOI Listing

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