Mechanism of cobalt–manganese catalysts deciphered

Schematic diagram illustrating the activation and deactivation processes of Co2MnO4 and CoMn2O4 during OER. Co2MnO4 is a) activated by forming Co-Mn oxyhydroxides via CoII(OH)2↔CoIII. Credit: Advanced Energy Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202403096

Conventional catalysts for hydrogen production via water electrolysis usually contain precious metals and are expensive. However, cheaper alternatives have been developed, for example cobalt–manganese catalysts. They have a high activity and are stable over a long period of time.

The decisive factor for these characteristics is their manganese content. Why manganese plays this essential role was unknown for a long time, but the mechanism has now been discovered by researchers from the German institutions Ruhr University Bochum, the Max Planck Institutes for Sustainable Materials and for Chemical Energy Conversion, Forschungszentrum Jülich and the University of Duisburg-Essen.

They published their findings in the journal Advanced Energy Materials on October 7, 2024.

Combination of different methods was the key to success

By applying an electrical voltage, water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen. The limiting step in this reaction is the oxygen evolution. Thus, researchers are looking for the optimal catalysts for this reaction step.

Cobalt electrocatalysts with a certain geometric structure, the so-called spinel structure, are normally inefficient and not stable over the long term. However, this changes when they are doped with manganese.

The research team used various methods to investigate what exactly happens on the surface of the catalysts during the electrolysis of water. They worked together within the Collaborative Research Center 247 “Heterogeneous Oxidation Catalysis in the Liquid Phase.”

“Joining forces with several institutes enabled us to observe the processes at the electrode surface with different methods—and this combination was the key to success,” says Professor Tong Li, head of Atomic-Scale Characterization at Ruhr University Bochum.

She is an expert in atomic probe tomography, a method that helps to visualize the spatial distribution of materials atom by atom. The team combined this method with transmission electron microscopy, X-ray fine structure absorption and X-ray photo emission spectroscopy.

The group showed that the manganese dissolves from the cobalt spinel surface during the reaction and then redeposits onto it. “It’s like a passenger on a bus who keeps hopping on and off,” states Tong Li.

More information:
Biao He et al, Effects of Dynamic Surface Transformation on the Activity and Stability of Mixed Co‐Mn Cubic Spinel Oxides in the Oxygen Evolution Reaction in Alkaline Media, Advanced Energy Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/aenm.202403096

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Ruhr-Universitaet-Bochum


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Mechanism of cobalt–manganese catalysts deciphered (2024, October 16)
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