Publication | Open Access
Observing the Electrochemical Oxidation of Co Metal at the Solid/Liquid Interface Using Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
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Citations
32
References
2017
Year
Recent advances of ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) have enabled the chemical composition and the electrical potential profile at a liquid/electrode interface under electrochemical reaction conditions to be directly probed. In this work, we apply this operando technique to study the surface chemical composition evolution on a Co metal electrode in 0.1 M KOH aqueous solution under various electrical biases. It is found that an ∼12.2 nm-thick layer of Co(OH)<sub>2</sub> forms at a potential of about -0.4 V<sub>Ag/AgCl</sub>, and upon increasing the anodic potential to about +0.4 V<sub>Ag/AgCl</sub>, this layer is partially oxidized into cobalt oxyhydroxide (CoOOH). A CoOOH/Co(OH)<sub>2</sub> mixture layer is formed on the top of the electrode surface. Finally, the oxidized surface layer can be reduced to Co<sup>0</sup> at a cathodic potential of -1.35 V<sub>Ag/Cl</sub>. These observations indicate that the ultrathin layer containing cobalt oxyhydroxide is the active phase for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) on a Co electrode in an alkaline electrolyte, consistent with previous studies.
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