posted on 2024-07-24, 19:35authored byJincheng Luo, Fanhao Kong, Jingxuan Yang, Min Wang
As a promising liquid hydrogen carrier, formic acid is
essential
for hydrogen energy. Glucose, as the most widely distributed monosaccharide
in nature, is valuable for co-electrolysis with water to produce formic
acid and hydrogen, though achieving high formate yield and current
density remains challenging. Herein, a nanostructured NiCoP on a 3D
Ni foam catalyst enables efficient electrooxidation of glucose to
formate, achieving an 85% yield and 200 mA current density at 1.47
V vs RHE. The catalyst forms a NiCoOOH/NiCoP/Ni foam sandwich structure
via anodic oxidative reconstruction, with NiCoOOH as the active site
and NiCoP facilitating electron conduction. Additionally, NiCoP/Ni
foam serves as both an anode and cathode for the production of formate
and hydrogen from wood-extracted sugar solutions. At 2.1 V, it reaches
a 300 mA current density, converting mixed sugars to formate with
a 74% yield and producing hydrogen at 104 mL cm2 h–1 with near 100% Faradaic efficiency.