Self-Assembled Conjugated
Coordination Polymer Nanorings:
Role of Morphology and Redox Sites for the Alkaline Electrocatalytic
Oxygen Evolution Reaction
posted on 2024-05-09, 15:37authored byVishwakarma
Ravikumar Ramlal, Kinjal B. Patel, Savan K. Raj, Divesh N. Srivastava, Amal Kumar Mandal
Electrocatalytic water splitting provides a sustainable
method
for storing intermittent energies, such as solar energy and wind,
in the form of hydrogen fuel. However, the oxygen evolution reaction
(OER), constituting the other half-cell reaction, is often considered
the bottleneck in overall water splitting due to its slow kinetics.
Therefore, it is crucial to develop efficient, cost-effective, and
robust OER catalysts to enhance the water-splitting process. Transition-metal-based
coordination polymers (CPs) serve as promising electrocatalysts due
to their diverse chemical architectures paired with redox-active metal
centers. Despite their potential, the rational use of CPs has faced
obstacles including a lack of insights into their catalytic mechanisms,
low conductivity, and morphology issues. Consequently, achieving success
in this field requires the rational design of ligands and topological
networks with the desired electronic structure. This study delves
into the design and synthesis of three novel conjugated coordination
polymers (CCPs) by leveraging the full conjugation of terpyridine-attached
flexible tetraphenylethylene units as electron-rich linkers with various
redox-active metal centers [Co(II), Ni(II), and Zn(II)]. The self-assembly
process is tuned for each CCP, resulting in two distinct morphologies:
nanosheets and nanorings. The electrocatalytic OER performance efficiency
is then correlated with factors such as the nanostructure morphology
and redox-active metal centers in alkaline electrolytes. Notably,
among the three morphologies studied, nanorings for each CCP exhibit
a superior OER activity. Co(II)-integrated CCPs demonstrate a higher
activity between the redox-active metal centers. Specifically, the
Co(II) nanoring morphology displays exceptional catalytic activity
for OER, with a lower overpotential of 347 mV at a current density
of 10 mA cm–2 and small Tafel slopes of 115 mV dec–1. The long-term durability is demonstrated for at
least 24 h at 1.57 V vs RHE during water splitting. This is presumably
the first proof that links the importance of nanostructure morphologies
to redox-active metal centers in improving the OER activity, and it
may have implications for other transdisciplinary energy-related applications.