Upcycling red brick into a superior monolithic hydrogen evolution electrocatalyst

Abstract

Harvesting endogenous active metals from the natural and waste materials to develop efficient water splitting electrocatalysts is highly promising to afford a sustainable H2 economy. Herein, fired red brick (RB), a universal building material throughout the history without any other utilization purposes, is converted into a superior monolithic electrocatalyst for the H2 evolution reaction (HER) via the successive chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and low-temperature phosphidation. During CVD and phosphorization processes, the endogenous Fe species within RB efficiently catalyze the growth of N, P-codoped carbon nanotubes (N, P-CNTs) from melamine pyrolysis, leading to the formation of high-density and well-interconnected Fe-encapsulated N, P-CNTs firmly embedded throughout the entire RB substrate (Fe@N, P-CNTs/RB) with high conductivity, excellent mechanical strength, and uniformly distributed active sites. The as-fabricated Fe@N, P-CNTs/RB can be directly used as a monolithic electrode for the HER in a 0.5 M H2SO4 solution, requiring overpotentials of 223.6 and 285.6 mV to reach current densities of 10 and 100 mA cm-2, respectively, and exhibiting a excepetional stability for 100 h at 10 mA cm-2 with a overpotential increase of only 69.7 mV.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Apr 2025
Accepted
29 May 2025
First published
30 May 2025

New J. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Upcycling red brick into a superior monolithic hydrogen evolution electrocatalyst

Z. Zhang, Y. Li, J. Zhang, Y. Zhao, M. Xu, F. Wang and S. Min, New J. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5NJ01735A

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