Heterostructure of NiCo2O4@Ni-CeO2 for High Current Density Water Splitting
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Date
2025
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Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
This study investigates the synthesis and characterization of NiCo₂O₄@Ni–CeO₂
heterostructures for enhanced electrolysis applications. Seven different electrodeposition
approaches were systematically evaluated, including stepwise and co-electrodeposition
methods, to understand the relationship between synthesis methodology and electrochemical
performance. The research addresses the critical need for cost-effective, earth-abundant
electrocatalysts to replace expensive noble metals in water splitting technology for green
hydrogen production. Our findings demonstrate that synthesis approach dramatically
influences catalytic performance. Sample S7, synthesized via co-electrodeposition, achieved
exceptional oxygen evolution reaction (OER) performance with an overpotential of 297 mV at
20 mA cm⁻², significantly outperforming individual components and demonstrating
competitive performance against literature benchmarks. However, this sample showed poor
hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity (404 mV at -10 mA cm⁻²), highlighting the inherent
challenges in bifunctional catalyst design. Conversely, samples S2 and S4 exhibited
excellent HER performance (136 mV each) but relatively poor OER activity. Comprehensive
characterization using scanning electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and
electrochemical impedance spectroscopy revealed that co-electrodeposition creates uniform
heterostructures with enhanced interfacial contact and optimal charge transfer properties (Rct
= 1.5 Ω). Surface wettability analysis confirmed superhydrophilic properties (0° contact angle)
for the co-electrodeposited sample, facilitating improved electrolyte-catalyst interaction. Light-
enhanced measurements demonstrated photocatalytic enhancement across all samples,
indicating potential for solar-driven applications. Overall water splitting analysis revealed that
sample S4 achieved the lowest total cell voltage (1.727 V), emphasizing that balanced
bifunctional performance is more critical than excellence in single half-reactions. The results
highlight fundamental trade-offs in heterostructured catalyst design, where optimization for
one reaction often compromises performance in the other. This work provides valuable
insights into structure-performance relationships and demonstrates the potential of
electrodeposited NiCo₂O₄@Ni–CeO₂ heterostructures for practical water splitting
applications.
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Keywords
Heterostructure, Water splitting, Electrodeposition, Oxygen evolution reaction, Hydrogen evolution reaction, NiCo2O4, CeO2, Bifunctional electrocatalyst, Green hydrogen
