4.8 Article

Operando Elucidation of Electrocatalytic and Redox Mechanisms on a 2D Metal Organic Framework Catalyst for Efficient Electrosynthesis of Hydrogen Peroxide in Neutral Media

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 34, Pages 15845-15854

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c06810

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [CHE-1955074]
  2. DOE Office of Science by the Argonne National Laboratory [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  3. Department of Energy
  4. MRCAT member institutions
  5. NSF through the Materials Research Science and Engineering Center [DMR-1720415]

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This study demonstrates the potential of a metal organic framework catalyst called Ni(3)HAB(2) for selective and active two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e(-) ORR) in neutral electrolytes. The study also reveals the influence of the catalyst's redox features on the ORR and proposes a hypothesis for the reaction mechanism.
The practical electrosynthesis of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is hindered by the lack of inexpensive and efficient catalysts for the two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e(-) ORR) in neutral electrolytes. Here, we show that Ni(3)HAB(2) (HAB = hexaaminobenzene), a two-dimensional metal organic framework (MOF), is a selective and active 2e(- )ORR catalyst in buffered neutral electrolytes with a linker-based redox feature that dynamically affects the ORR behaviors. Rotating ring-disk electrode measurements reveal that Ni(3)HAB(2) has high selectivity for 2e(- )ORR (> 80% at 0.6 V vs RHE) but lower Faradaic efficiency due to this linker redox process. Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements reveal that under argon gas the charging of the organic linkers causes a dynamic Ni oxidation state, but in O-2-saturated conditions, the electronic and physical structures of Ni3HAB2 change little and oxygen-containing species strongly adsorb at potentials more cathodic than the reduction potential of the organic linker (E-redox similar to 0.3 V vs RHE). We hypothesize that a primary 2e- ORR mechanism occurs directly on the organic linkers (rather than the Ni) when E > E-redox, but when E < E-redox, H2O2 production can also occur through Ni-mediated linker discharge. By operating the bulk electrosynthesis at a low overpotential (0.4 V vs RHE), up to 662 ppm of H2O2 can be produced in a buffered neutral solution in an H-cell due to minimized strong adsorption of oxygenates. This work demonstrates the potential of conductive MOF catalysts for 2e(- )ORR and the importance of understanding catalytic active sites under electrochemical operation.

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