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      Fabrication of practical catalytic electrodes using insulating and eco-friendly substrates for overall water splitting

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          Abstract

          A family of catalytic electrodes fabricated by insulating substrates of paper, cloth and sponge which bring dramatic advantages of high performance, low cost, light weight, eco-friendliness, flexibility, and simple fabrication, were developed.

          Abstract

          The development of efficient and cost-effective catalytic electrodes is of great importance to electrolysis. Herein, a strategy of fabricating practical catalytic electrodes by depositing conductive catalysts on inexpensive and easily accessible insulating substrates of paper, textiles and sponge has been realized and well developed. These electrodes are found to be highly active toward overall water splitting. As a distinctive example, the Ni–P–B/paper electrode affords 50 mA cm −2 at overpotentials of only 76 mV for the hydrogen evolution reaction and 263 mV for the oxygen evolution reaction, and can survive at large current density of 1000 mA cm −2 for over 240 h without apparent performance degradation in 1.0 M KOH. A two-electrode cell constructed by this paper electrode, which is only 1/5 the weight of a traditional metal electrode, delivered 50 mA cm −2 water-splitting current at a cell voltage of only 1.661 V, rivalling the integrated state-of-the-art Pt–C/Ni and IrO 2/Ni electrode. Moreover, a functional Ni–P–B/paper ring electrode with in situ separation function has been constructed, enabling simultaneous generation, separation and collection of hydrogen and oxygen. This discovery may enable a large extension toward practical catalytic electrodes that are also active, cheap, light, flexible, earth-abundant and recyclable.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          EESNBY
          Energy & Environmental Science
          Energy Environ. Sci.
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          1754-5692
          1754-5706
          January 21 2020
          2020
          : 13
          : 1
          : 102-110
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Material Science
          [2 ]Fudan University
          [3 ]Shanghai
          [4 ]China
          [5 ]College of Science
          [6 ]State Key Laboratory of Functional Materials for Informatics
          [7 ]Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology
          [8 ]CAS
          [9 ]Research Center of Resource Recycling Science and Engineering
          [10 ]Shanghai Polytechnic University
          Article
          10.1039/C9EE00839J
          5b3ad06c-7b1b-49ad-8836-d0dc380dddae
          © 2020

          http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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