Concomitant polymorphs: an alternative to modulate the oxygen evolution performance of mononuclear nickel complexes†
Abstract
The availability of polymorphs of metallic complexes provides an opportunity to reveal the relationship between crystal packing and catalytic activity. Herein, we immobilize two stable concomitant polymorphs (green NiL2-G and red NiL2-R) of mononuclear nickel NiL2 on electrodes as heterogeneous oxygen evolution reaction catalysts. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the formation of L2NiIV=O from L2NiIII-OH is the rate-determining step, whereas R-L2NiIII-OH is more stable than G-L2NiIII-OH, and forming L2NiIV=O from the former has a much lower barrier than from the latter. Consistently, NiL2-R exhibits a lower overpotential (339 mV) than NiL2-G (466 mV) at 10 mA cm−2.