Highly porous non-precious bimetallic electrocatalysts for efficient hydrogen evolution

  • Qi Lu
  • , Gregory S. Hutchings
  • , Weiting Yu
  • , Yang Zhou
  • , Robert V. Forest
  • , Runzhe Tao
  • , Jonathan Rosen
  • , Bryan T. Yonemoto
  • , Zeyuan Cao
  • , Haimei Zheng
  • , John Q. Xiao
  • , Feng Jiao
  • , Jingguang G. Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

510 Scopus citations

Abstract

A robust and efficient non-precious metal catalyst for hydrogen evolution reaction is one of the key components for carbon dioxide-free hydrogen production. Here we report that a hierarchical nanoporous copper-titanium bimetallic electrocatalyst is able to produce hydrogen from water under a mild overpotential at more than twice the rate of state-of-the-art carbon-supported platinum catalyst. Although both copper and titanium are known to be poor hydrogen evolution catalysts, the combination of these two elements creates unique copper-copper-titanium hollow sites, which have a hydrogen-binding energy very similar to that of platinum, resulting in an exceptional hydrogen evolution activity. In addition, the hierarchical porosity of the nanoporous copper-titanium catalyst also contributes to its high hydrogen evolution activity, because it provides a large-surface area for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution, and improves the mass transport properties. Moreover, the catalyst is self-supported, eliminating the overpotential associated with the catalyst/support interface.

Original languageEnglish
Article number6567
JournalNature communications
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 22 2015

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