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Research PaperResearchia:202603.19037[Chemistry > Chemistry]

Mechanistic Insights into Enhanced Alkaline Oxygen Evolution on Zn-Al Alloy Electrodes

Abdul Ahad Mamun

Abstract

Electrochemical water electrolysis, which produces clean energy carriers to mitigate carbon emissions, lacks suitable, low-cost electrodes for efficient oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline water splitting. To address this challenge, we developed Zn-Al alloy electrodes with varying Al contents up to 20 wt.% via powder metallurgy method and conducted electrochemical measurements of the OER in alkaline solution to investigate their catalytic performance. We also performed first-principles calculations to examine their thermodynamic phase stability and electronic structures. Both theoretical and experimental results indicated that incorporating β‰₯20\geq 20 wt.% Al into Zn led to thermodynamic phase instability and secondary-phase segregation in Al-rich regions, limiting reaction kinetics and reducing catalytic efficiency. Although the Al content of 5 wt.% into Zn exhibited favorable thermodynamic and electronic characteristics, but its electrochemical performance was inefficient and poor due to inadequate reaction active sites on the surface. In contrast, the 10 wt.% and 15 wt.% Al into Zn showed approximately three- and two-fold increases in anodic exchange current density relative to pure Zn, respectively. Additionally, the anodic overpotential losses (Ξ·0,aΞ·_{0,a}) measured at a current density of 12 mAcmβˆ’2^{-2} were 0.240 V for Zn0.9_{0.9}Al0.1_{0.1} and 0.5603 V for Zn0.85_{0.85}Al0.15_{0.15}, significantly lower than that of pure Zn (Ξ·0,a=1.086Ξ·_{0,a} = 1.086 V). While Zn0.9_{0.9}Al0.1_{0.1} and Zn0.85_{0.85}Al0.15_{0.15} showed similar charge transfer resistance (RCTR_{\rm CT}), Zn0.9_{0.9}Al0.1_{0.1} demonstrated superior reaction kinetics and lower Ξ·0,aΞ·_{0,a} across all samples tested. Furthermore, the improved kinetics and reduced overpotential of the Zn-Al alloys favorably compare with those of other transition-metal-based catalysts, including Fe-Co-Ni-Mo alloys and Fe-doped CuO.


Source: arXiv:2603.17904v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.17904v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2603.17904v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2603.17904v1

Submission:3/19/2026
Comments:0 comments
Subjects:Chemistry; Chemistry
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arXiv: This paper is hosted on arXiv, an open-access repository
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