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Metal-Free Hydrogen-Bonded Polymers Mimic Noble Metal Electrocatalysts
Authors:Halime Coskun  Abdalaziz Aljabour  Phil de Luna  He Sun  Nobuyuki Nishiumi  Tsukasa Yoshida  Georg Koller  Michael G Ramsey  Theresia Greunz  David Stifter  Moritz Strobel  Sabine Hild  Achim Walter Hassel  Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci  Edward H Sargent  Philipp Stadler
Affiliation:1. Institute of Physical Chemistry, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz, 4040 Austria;2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Toronto, 10 King's College Road, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3G4 Canada;3. Research Center for Organic Electronics (ROEL), Faculty of Engineering, Yamagata University, 4-3-16 Jonan, Yonezawa, Yamagata, 992-8510 Japan;4. Department of Physics, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 5, Graz, 8010 Austria;5. Center for Surface and Nanoanalytics (ZONA), Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz, 4040 Austria;6. Institute for Polymer Science, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz, 4040 Austria;7. Institute for Chemical Technology of Inorganic Materials, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz, 4040 Austria;8. Institute of Physical Chemistry and Linz Institute of Technology, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz, 4040 Austria
Abstract:The most active and efficient catalysts for the electrochemical hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) rely on platinum, a fact that increases the cost of producing hydrogen and thereby limits the widespread adoption of this fuel. Here, a metal-free organic electrocatalyst that mimics the platinum surface by implementing a high work function and incorporating hydrogen-affine hydrogen bonds is introduced. These motifs, inspired from enzymology, are deployed here as selective reaction centres. It is shown that the keto-amine hydrogen-bond motif enhances the rate-determining step in proton reduction to molecular hydrogen. The keto-amine-functionalized polymers reported herein evolve hydrogen at an overpotential of 190 mV. They share certain key properties with platinum: a similar work function and excellent electrochemical stability and chemical robustness. These properties allow the demonstration of one week of continuous HER operation without notable degradation nor delamination from the carrier electrode. Scaled continuous-flow electrolysis is reported and 1 L net molecular hydrogen is produced within less than 9 h using 2.3 mg of polymer electrocatalyst.
Keywords:conducting polymers  electrocatalysis  hydrogen bonds  hydrogen evolution reaction  polydopamine
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