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Published November 25, 2014 | public
Journal Article

Electrocatalytic and Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production from Acidic and Neutral-pH Aqueous Solutions Using Iron Phosphide Nanoparticles

Abstract

Nanostructured transition-metal phosphides have recently emerged as Earth-abundant alternatives to platinum for catalyzing the hydrogen-evolution reaction (HER), which is central to several clean energy technologies because it produces molecular hydrogen through the electrochemical reduction of water. Iron-based catalysts are very attractive targets because iron is the most abundant and least expensive transition metal. We report herein that iron phosphide (FeP), synthesized as nanoparticles having a uniform, hollow morphology, exhibits among the highest HER activities reported to date in both acidic and neutral-pH aqueous solutions. As an electrocatalyst operating at a current density of −10 mA cm^–2, FeP nanoparticles deposited at a mass loading of ∼1 mg cm^–2 on Ti substrates exhibited overpotentials of −50 mV in 0.50 M H_2SO_4 and −102 mV in 1.0 M phosphate buffered saline. The FeP nanoparticles supported sustained hydrogen production with essentially quantitative faradaic yields for extended time periods under galvanostatic control. Under UV illumination in both acidic and neutral-pH solutions, FeP nanoparticles deposited on TiO_2 produced H_2 at rates and amounts that begin to approach those of Pt/TiO_2. FeP therefore is a highly Earth-abundant material for efficiently facilitating the HER both electrocatalytically and photocatalytically.

Additional Information

© 2014 American Chemical Society. Received for review August 28, 2014 and accepted September 24, 2014; published online September 24, 2014. The work at PSU was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Center for Chemical Innovation on Solar Fuels (CHE-1305124) and at Caltech by the Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis, a DOE Energy Innovation Hub, supported through the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Award Number DE-SC0004993. TEM was performed in the Penn State Microscopy and Cytometry Facility (University Park, PA), and HRTEM, EDS, XPS, and DRIFTS datawere acquired at theMaterials Characterization Laboratory of the Penn State Materials Research Institute. The authors thank Greg Barber, Jennifer Gray, Lymaris Ortiz Rivera, and Nella Vargas-Barbosa for technical support and helpful discussions.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023