Alkaline water electrolyzers are a promising technology for energy storage and conversion through the electrochemical production of hydrogen; however, the slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) pose a major challenge. The alkaline environment enables the use of non-Pt-group metals as OER catalysts, in particular, NiFe-based materials. In this study, Mn and/or Cr were elementally mixed with NiFe to further improve the OER catalyst properties through a controlled, systematic synthesis process involving thin films prepared by electron beam-induced physical vapor deposition (PVD). By exploring both simultaneous co-deposition and serial deposition of the different metals, the OER performance was investigated as a function of both the location of Mn or Cr in the multi-metal NiFe-based catalysts and the difference between surface versus bulk mixing. The distinct differences in the redox dynamics, surface oxidation, and stability of the seven studied catalysts reveal metal Cr- and/or Mn-overlayers as a promising synthesis approach for fine-tuning catalyst properties and improving the OER performance.
Schröder et al. (Fri,) studied this question.