Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1273805 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Ultrathin and transparent nanostructured Ni(OH)2 films were deposited on conducting glass (F:SnO2) by a urea-based chemical bath deposition method. By controlling the deposition time, the amount of deposited Ni(OH)2 was varied over 7 orders of magnitude. The turnover number for O2 generation, defined as the number of O2 molecules generated per catalytic site (Ni atom) and per second, increases drastically as the electrocatalyst amount decreases. The electrocatalytic activity of the studied samples (measured as the current density at a certain potential) increases with the amount of deposited Ni(OH)2 until a saturation value is already obtained for a thin film of around 1 nm in thickness, composed of Ni(OH)2 nanoplatelets lying flat on the conductive support. The deposition of additional amounts of catalyst generates a porous honeycomb structure that does not improve (only maintains) the electrocatalytic activity. The optimized ultrathin electrodes show a remarkable stability, which indicates that the preparation of highly transparent electrodes, efficient for oxygen evolution, with a minimum amount of nickel is possible.

► Ultrathin Ni(OH)2 layers were deposited on conducting glass from aqueous solution. ► The electrocatalytic properties were studied for the oxygen evolution reaction. ► The turnover for O2 evolution drastically grows as the Ni(OH)2 amount diminishes. ► The optimum amount of deposited Ni(OH)2 corresponds to 2 monolayers. ► Efficient and highly transparent anodes for oxygen evolution are demonstrated.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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