posted on 2019-07-23, 12:41authored byAlaina L. Strickler, Drew Higgins, Thomas F. Jaramillo
Iridium-based mixed metal oxide phases
have been shown as promising electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution
reaction (OER) because of their ability to stabilize unique Ir-based
surface sites with modulated properties and improved activity. Herein,
the effect of crystal structure on the OER activity of Sr iridate
particles is explored. Phase-pure Sr4IrO6, Sr2IrO4, and SrIrO3 micrometer-scale particles
show high activity toward the OER with the electrode area-based geometric
activity increasing in the order of IrOx < SrIrO3 < Sr4IrO6 < Sr2IrO4 at a constant Ir mass electrode loading. Particularly,
Sr2IrO4 displays superior activity and stability
compared to commercial Ir/C (Premetek) nanoparticles, including more
than an order of magnitude improvement in the catalyst surface area
normalized specific activity. This translated to a similar Ir-based
mass activity for Sr2IrO4 despite significantly
larger average particles sizes (0.1–3 μm for Sr2IrO4 versus 2–3 nm for Ir/C) and a 40-fold improvement
in Ir-based mass activity in comparison to IrOx particles synthesized by a similar thermochemical procedure.
During electrochemical testing of the Sr iridate materials, initial
Sr leaching results in the formation of a stable Ir-rich catalyst
surface with a modified electronic environment compared to Ir-only
materials, potentially leading to enhanced OER activity. The superior
intrinsic activity of Sr iridates illustrates the ability of surface-leached
crystalline materials to stabilize high activity surface sites capable
of significantly improving catalyst performance toward economical
OER-based technologies.