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Ultrafast synthesis of vacancy-rich IrO2/TiO2 for acidic oxygen evolution reaction

  • Lingchang Kong
  • , Xiaoya Cui*
  • , Yujing Li
  • , Kaiwen Yang
  • , Hengxing Peng
  • , Libing Liao
  • , Guocheng Lv
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • China University of Geosciences, Beijing
  • Beijing Institute of Technology
  • Tianjin University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Supported catalysts are an effective approach in proton exchange membrane water electrolysis (PEMWE) owing to their enhanced metal-support interfacial interaction. We propose a novel high-temperature shock (HTS) technique by Joule-heating to construct an electronic coupling interface between IrO2 nanoclusters catalysts and TiO2 support (IrO2/TiO2-HTS). The HTS strategy features an ultrafast heating rate and compresses the synthesis time from hours to seconds (2 h to 60 s). The as-prepared catalyst features uniformly embedding the ultrafine IrO2 nanoclusters enrich oxygen vacancies within the redox-active metal oxide matrix, yielding exceptional mass activity and ultrastable performance. The mass activity of the catalyst is 1081 A/gIr at 1.6 V vs. RHE, 13 times higher than of commercial IrO2, and it demonstrates operation time for over 1100 h at 10 mA/cm2 with a voltage decay rate of only 40 μV/h. This HTS strategy offers a scalable route to accelerate vacancy engineering and strong metal oxide-support interaction (SMOSI) formation, enabling high activity at reduced Ir loading and long-term stability under acidic conditions. The approach is general and can be extended to other supported binary oxides, opening opportunities for the development of additional high‑performance OER catalysts and PEM‑relevant electrolysis systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number112375
JournalChinese Chemical Letters
Volume37
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Adsorbate evolution mechanism (AEM)
  • High-temperature shock (HTS)
  • Oxygen vacancy (O)
  • Proton exchange membrane water electrolysis (PEMWE)
  • Supported iridium-based catalyst

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