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Article

Study on Catalytic Water Oxidation Properties of Polynuclear Manganese Containing Polyoxometalates

College of Chemistry, Jilin University, Changchun 130012, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Catalysts 2022, 12(2), 160; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal12020160
Submission received: 24 December 2021 / Revised: 19 January 2022 / Accepted: 25 January 2022 / Published: 27 January 2022

Abstract

:
Splitting of water to produce hydrogen and oxygen is a green and effective method to produce clean energy. Finding an efficient water decomposition catalyst is the key step to realize water decomposition. In this work, by choosing from the literature, six polynuclear manganese (Mn) containing polyoxometalates (Mn-POMs) with different Mn-O clusters and oxidation states of Mn, [MnIIMnIIISiW10O37(OH)(H2O)]6− (Mn2-POM), [MnII3MnIII(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]9− (Mn4-POM), [MnII4MnIII2Ge3W24O94(H2O)2]18− (Mn6-POM-1), [MnIII2MnII43-O)2(H2O)4(B-β-SiW8O31)(B-β-SiW9O34)(γ-SiW10O36)]18− (Mn6-POM-4), [{MnIII3MnIV4O4(OH)2(OH2)}2(W6O22)(H2W8O32)2(H4W13O46)2]26− (Mn14-POM), [MnII19 (OH)12(SiW10O37)6]34− (Mn19-POM) were prepared. First, the catalytic performance towards the water oxidation of six Mn-POMs was investigated in solution for the first time. Second, six Mn-POMs were fabricated on the surface of ITO electrode using layer-by-layer self-assembly (LBL) to form the composite films, which were characterized by UV-vis spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry, and then the catalytic water oxidation performance of the composite films was studied and compared with that in solution via a series of controlled experiments, the results indicate that the Mn-POMs with three-dimensional structures, which contain variable valence Mn-O cluster similar to the structure of photocatalytic active center (PSII) exhibit better catalytic performance.

1. Introduction

In recent years, global warming has led to the continuous deterioration of the human living environment. COVID-19 has also impacted global trade, exacerbating the impact of the energy crisis on social life. The attention and demand of the international community for clean energy are increasing. Hydrogen energy is recognized as a clean energy source, and its combustion product is water. At present, hydrogen production by cracking fossil fuels is widely used, which also causes secondary emissions of greenhouse gases and a decrease in the quantity of fossil fuels. Therefore, if water (the largest potential hydrogen energy provider) can be split to produce hydrogen, a green and recyclable clean energy system will be established. However, there are some problems to be solved, such as high energy consumption and high operation cost. Therefore, it is very necessary to develop fast, economical and reliable catalysts.
POMs are metal oxygen cluster compounds composed of transition metal atoms (M) and oxygen atoms (O) connected by MOx polyhedra (tetrahedra, octahedra and icosahedra) in the way of common angle and common edge [1]. Because of this, the structures of POMs are changeable. The properties of POMs can be changed by adjusting the type and structure of transition metals. Heteropoly acids containing heteroatoms have richer structures due to the introduction of heteroatoms. POMs have excellent catalytic performance and reversible redox activity. They can be the potential catalysts for water cracking. At present, heteropoly acids containing ruthenium [2], manganese [3], cobalt, nickel and copper [4] have been proved to catalyze the decomposition of water. Compared with precious metal substituted polyacids, manganese, cobalt, nickel, iron and other metal substituted POMs are cheap and have a wider range of applications. Among them, the Mn-O clusters in Mn-POM have the same composition or structure as the photosynthetic center of green plants [5]. Therefore, we focus on the research of Mn containing POM catalysts. There are dozens of Mn containing POMs ranging from 1 to 40 [3,6]. At present, the catalytic water oxidation properties of some manganese containing POMs have been studied separately [7,8,9,10,11,12], the effects of amount, oxidation state of Mn ions and Mn-O cluster structure on the catalytic performance for water decomposition have hardly been reported. In order to select Mn-POMs with good catalytic performance, and find the influence of amount, oxidation state and Mn-O cluster structure, we selected six MnxPOMs as representative for comparison, including two manganese containing POMs: [MnIIMnIIISiW10O37(OH)(H2O)]6− (Mn2-POM) [13] and four manganese containing POM: [MnII3MnIII(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]9− (Mn4-POM) [14], six manganese containing POMs: [MnII4MnIII2Ge3W24O94(H2O)2]18− (Mn6-POM-1) [15], [MnIII2MnII43-O)2(H2O)4(B-β-SiW8O31)(B-β-SiW9O34)(γ-SiW10O36)]18− (Mn6-POM-4) [16], 14 manganese containing POM: [{MnIII3MnIV4O4(OH)2(OH2)}2(W6O22)(H2W8O32)2(H4W13O46)2]26− (Mn14-POM) [17] and 19 manganese containing POM [MnII19 (OH)12(SiW10O37)6]34− (Mn19-POM) [18]. It is hoped that certain laws can be found for researchers’ reference.
Mn2-POM is synthesized by one pot method from Mn(CH3COO)2·4H2O,Na10[a-SiW9O34]·15H2O and KCl at 80 °C [13]. The compound is a one-dimensional chain structure formed by Keggin type units containing two manganese, in which one manganese is divalent and one manganese is trivalent. The structure is shown in Figure 1a.
Mn4-POM was synthesized from precursors K10[Mn4(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]·41H2O and K2S2O8 at 85 °C [14]. Multiple Mn-O-Mn bonds are formed between Mn atoms in the compound, and the positions of four manganese are close to the plane, of which three manganese are divalent and one manganese is trivalent. The structure is shown in Figure 1b.
Mn6-POM-1 was synthesized from Na2WO4, GeO2, HCl, Mn(CH3COO)2·4H2O and imidazole at 90 °C [15]. The compound is composed of two Keggin units with three manganese substituted [Mn3GeW9O34]4− and a six-vacancy bridged cluster [GeW6O26]12−. The structure is shown in Figure 2a, in which each Keggin unit species substituted by [Mn3GeW9O34]4− contains two divalent manganese and one trivalent manganese.
Mn6-POM-4 was synthesized from K8[γ-SiW10O36]·12H2O, MnCl2 and K2CO3 at 40 °C. The compound consists of three inequivalent silicotungstate Keggin fragments ({SiW8}, {SiW9}, {SiW10}) and {Mn4O4} cubane core with an appended “pendant” Mn ion. The structure of {Mn4O4} cubane core is very similar to that of PSII [16]. The compound was previously confirmed by our research group to have the ability of photo-electrocatalytic water decomposition [19]. The structure is shown in Figure 3. The compound contains four divalent manganese and two trivalent manganese.
Mn14-POM was synthesized from precursors Mn12-acetate, Na2WO4, NaOAc·3H2O, HCl and dimethylamine hydrochloride at 100 °C. The compound contains a total of 14 Mn centers, which are divided into a pair of Mn7 cores. Each core is embedded in the shell of diamagnetic isopolytungstate ligand and well separated from the other [17]. The structure of Mn7 is shown in Figure 4. Each Mn7 includes a [MnIV4O4]8+ cubic unit, and three MnIII are connected at the periphery. The compound contains 8 tetravalent manganese and 6 trivalent manganese.
Mn19-POM was synthesized from MnCl2·4H2O, Na10[A-α-SiW9O34], NaOH, Na3PO4 and HCl at 70 °C [18]. The structure is shown in Figure 5. All 19 MnII ions are located on the same plane to form a hexagonal structure based on edge shared MnO6 octahedron.
In order to more intuitively understand the valence of Mn ions in MnxPOMs, we summarize it in Table 1.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Structural Analysis

2.1.1. Infrared Spectrum (IR) Test

In order to verify that the MnxPOMs were synthesized according to the literature, their infrared spectra were measured. As shown in Figure 6, we can observe the main characteristic vibration frequencies at 991, 945, 898, 779 and 710 cm−1 (as shown in Figure 6a), four weak peaks at 662, 642, 538 and 480 (internal diagram in Figure 6a); the main characteristic vibration frequencies at 1105, 1060, 944, 778, 620, 592 and 500 cm−1 (as shown in Figure 6b); the main characteristic vibration frequencies at 941, 875, 770, 696 and 458 and the weak peaks at 509 cm−1 (as shown in Figure 6c); the main characteristic vibration frequencies at 1626, 940, 877, 775, 725 and 509 cm−1 (as shown in Figure 6d); the main characteristic vibration frequencies at 1629, 1465, 1438, 1408, 1385, 1020, 943 and 750 cm−1; and the weak peaks at 676, 631, 597, 569, 487 and 467 cm−1 in the illustration (as shown in Figure 6e); The main characteristic vibration frequencies at 988, 945, 895, 793, 711, 646 and 536 cm−1 (as shown in Figure 6f) are consistent with the infrared characteristic peaks of Mn2-POM [13], Mn4-POM [14,20], Mn6-POM-1 [15], Mn6-POM-4 [16], Mn14-POM [17] and Mn19-POM [18] in the literature, which proves that we have successfully prepared the above six MnxPOMs. There are some small differences between the measured and reported values, which may be caused by the different instrument used.

2.1.2. X-ray Transmission Spectroscopy

In order to deeply understand the composition of MnX-POMs and prove that they were successfully assembled on ITO, the XPS of six MnX-POMs films electrodes were tested. As shown in Figures S3–S8, according to the high-resolution spectra, we can confirm that Mn, Si, W and O elements appear in Mn2-POM (Figure S3), Mn6-POM-4 (Figure S6) and Mn19-POM (Figure S8), Mn, P, W and O appear in Mn4-POM (Figure S4), Mn, Ge, W and O appear in Mn6-POM-1 (Figure S5), and Mn, W and O appear in Mn14-POM (Figure S7). The XPS spectra of N1s and Cl2p in Figures S4a and S8a belong to PDDA and PSS. Figure S7c is the Mn2p diagram of [Mn14-POM]5. There is a narrow peak at 644 eV binding energy, corresponding to Mn4+ [21], which proves the existence of Mn4+ in Mn14-POM. Figures S3–S6c have a wide Mn2p3/2 peak at 638 to 644 eV, which is different from the narrow peak shown in Figure S8c at 640.5 eV, which indicates the presence of is Mn2+. For the former, there is a wide peak due to the presence of Mn2+ and Mn3+ in a compound.

2.2. Electrochemical Characteristics

2.2.1. Cyclic Voltammetry

In order to further verify that MnxPOMs were correctly prepared, the electrochemical behavior of MnxPOMs in solution was studied by cyclic voltammetry (CV). In Figure 7a, it is found that there are two oxidation peaks of Mn2-POM at 0.5 and 1.2 V potentials, which are the oxidation peaks of Mn2+/3+ and Mn3+/4+ respectively. At the same time, there are three reduction peaks at 1.0, 0.85 and 0.4 V, which are Mn4+/3+, Mn4+/2+ and Mn3+/2+ respectively. It is consistent with the literature. In Figure 7b, it is found that there a peak of Mn4-POM at 0.9 V of oxidation peaks of Mn2+/4+ and two reduction peaks at 1.1, and 0.7 V which are Mn4+/3+ and Mn4+/2+ respectively. In Figure 7c, it is found that an oxidation peaks of Mn6-POM-1 at 0.75 V of oxidation peaks of Mn2+/4+ and two reduction peaks at 0.62, and 0.4 V which are Mn4+/2+ and Mn3+/2+ respectively.
It can be observed from Figure 7d that there are three obvious oxidation peaks at 0.3, 0.65 and 1.1 V, respectively corresponding to Mn2+/3+, Mn2+/4+and Mn3+/4+. At the same time, there are three reduction peaks, at 1.1, 0.75 and 0.15 V, which are Mn4+/3+, Mn4+/2+and Mn3+/2+ respectively. It is consistent with the literature. It can be observed from Figure 7e that there is an obvious oxidation peak of Mn3+/4+ at 1.1 V, and there are no other oxidation peaks, because the valence of Mn in Mn14-POM is trivalent and tetravalent, and there is no divalent manganese. This also confirmed that the synthetic product was Mn14-POM. It can be observed from Figure 7f that there are three obvious oxidation peaks at 0.53, 0.88 and 1.18 V, respectively corresponding to Mn2+/3+, Mn2+/4+and Mn3+/4+. At the same time, there are three reduction peaks, at 1.0, 0.7 and 0.4 V, which are Mn4+/3+, Mn4+/2+and Mn3+/2+ respectively. This confirms the existence of divalent manganese in Mn19-POM. It is consistent with the literature.
It should be noted that in order to facilitate comparison with the literature, we conducted CVs test of MnxPOMs according to the experimental conditions in the literature, resulting in differences in the experimental conditions between MnxPOMs, including pH, MnxPOMs concentration, scan rate, and the composition and concentration of buffer solution. Thus, redox potentials of Mn are different.

2.2.2. pH

In order to determine the optimal pH value of the subsequent catalytic experiment in aqueous solution and study the stability of the MnxPOMs at different pH, we tested the CVs of six MnxPOMs at pH 5/6/7. As shown in Figure 8, most MnxPOMs have obvious redox peaks at pH 5/6/7, indicating that the MnxPOMs are stable within this range, and the redox peak of Mn of the MnxPOMs moves to the negative potential direction with the increase of pH, indicating that there is proton migration in the redox process of Mn. The redox peak of compound Mn19-POM decreases with the increase of pH, indicating that the compound is relatively stable under acidic conditions.

2.3. Assembly of Thin Film Electrode

We use the layer by layer assembly method to assemble the MnxPOMs to the ITO electrode surface. See Section 3.3 for the assembly method. In order to verify the repeatability of the assembly method, we monitored the UV-Vis absorption of the films during the assembly process. At the same time, we also carried out secondary verification by electrochemical means.

UV-Vis Absorption Spectrum Test

As can be seen from Figure S1a, MnxPOMs has an absorption peak in the ultraviolet range of 243 to 257 nm. The growth process of [MnxPOMs] n was monitored by UV-vis spectroscopy. As shown in Figure 9 when comparing the absorption spectra of components MnxPOMs in the composite film with components MnxPOMs in the solution, it can be observed that the characteristic absorption peak of MnxPOMs appears in the spectrum of each layer, indicating that MnxPOMs has been assembled on the composite film. In addition, as shown in Figure S1c the absorbance value of MnxPOMs at the characteristic absorption peak is taken to draw the relationship with the number of composite film layers. It is found that there is a highly linear relationship between them, which proves that MnxPOMs grows evenly on the composite film.

2.4. Oxygen Evolution Reaction (OER)

2.4.1. OER of MnxPOMs Solution

Firstly, we compared the catalytic water oxidation performance of MnxPOMs under the same solution concentration using cyclic voltammetry. From Figure 10, we can see that under the same potential conditions (E = 1.4 V), the order of the current density for MnxPOMs is as follows: Mn14-POM > Mn19-POM > Mn2-POM > Mn4-POM > Mn6-POM-4 > Mn6-POM-1, while at E = 1.5 V, the order is as follows: Mn14-POM > Mn19-POM > Mn6-POM-4 > Mn2-POM ≈ Mn4-POM > Mn6-POM-1. See Table 2 for specific values.

2.4.2. OER of Assembled Thin Film Electrode

In order to fix the MnxPOMs on the electrode surface to reuse the catalyst, we chose the layer by layer assembly method to fabricate MnxPOMs on the ITO electrode surface. See Section 3.3 for detailed operation steps. We assembled multilayer thin films and monitored the electrochemical behavior of thin film electrodes. It can be seen from Figure 11a that the redox peak current density of MnxPOMs on the electrode surface increases with the increase of the number of assembly layers. It can be seen from the inner graph that the oxidation peak current density has a linear relationship with the number of assembly layers. Combined with the regular changes of ultraviolet spectra in Figure 9b,c, we can confirm the effectiveness of the layer by layer assembly method, and MnxPOMs multilayer thin film electrodes were successfully prepared. At the same time, we monitored the catalytic water oxidation performance of the thin film electrode by Linear Scanning Voltammetry (LSV). It can be seen from Figure 11b that the current density of the electrode catalytic water oxidation increases with the increase of the number of assembly layers. In order to facilitate comparison, we selected a representative [MnxPOM]3 for horizontal comparison, as shown in Figure 12.
As shown in Figure 12a, we compared the OER performance of [MnxPOM]3 thin film electrode. At E = 1.4 V, Mn14-POM has the highest current density (250.97 μA cm−2), followed by Mn19-POM. See Table 3 for specific values. We believe that the catalytic current of MnxPOM may depend on the amount of Mn in MnxPOM, Mn valence and material structure. However, according to our experimental results, Mn14-POM current density is greater than Mn19-POM, and Mn2-POM current density is greater than Mn6-POM. The amount of Mn in MnxPOM is not a decisive factor. We believe that among the six manganese containing POMs, Mn14-POM has the largest current density, the smallest catalytic peak starting potential (0.92 V) and the highest catalytic performance, which should be attributed to its Mn-O cluster cubic structure and its manganese in a higher oxidation state. The Mn-O cluster cubic structure is similar to that of the PSII active center, [Mn4CaO5]. In fact, there are two trivalent Mn and two tetravalent Mn in [Mn4CaO5], and Mn14-POM is similar to it. Among them, the view of Mn-O cluster cubic structure is also confirmed in the comparison of two Mn6-POM with the same number and the same valence of Mn. The current density of Mn6-POM-4 (29.73 μA cm−2)with Mn-O cluster cubic structure is more than twice that of Mn6-POM (13.22 μA cm−2) at 1.4 V potential, and the peak onset potential is 1.07 V, which is 0.15 V ahead of Mn6-POM-1.
In Table 4, some study reports regarding the electrocatalytic activity of manganese containing POMs for water decomposition are listed for comparison. They all adopt the layer by layer assembly method, which is comparable. In contrast, Mn14-POM with Mn-O cubic structure shows better catalytic performance.
It can be seen from Table 4 that Mn14-POM in this paper has better OER catalytic properties compared with other manganese containing POMs tested by the same method. At the same time, in order to understand the practical prospect of our materials, we have compared them with precious metal commercial reference materials in Table 5. The experimental environment is neutral. It is found that there are still some gaps that can be improved.
The durability and stability of materials have also been studied., taking Mn14POM as an example. As shown in Figure 13, we compared the electrocatalytic oxidation performance of a thin film electrode before and after standing for 48 days. We can observe that after standing for 48 days, the peak potential of electrocatalytic oxidation of the thin film electrode moves slightly forward, but the catalytic current density at 1.5 V potential does not change significantly, it shows that the catalytic components in the thin film electrode can exist stably on the electrode surface for a long time. Then, the electrode was electrolyzed at a constant potential for 1200 s, and the LSV test was carried out again. It was found that the peak potential of electrocatalytic oxidation of the thin film electrode moved slightly forward, and the catalytic current density decreased by 22%, which was caused by the partial falling off of the main catalytic components during the test. The stability of other MnxPOMs materials can be found in the supporting information.

3. Materials and Methods

3.1. Materials and Apparatus

3.1.1. Materials

Poly (diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (PDDA) (Mw = 10,000–20,000) and poly (4-styrene sulfonic acid) sodium salt (PSS) were obtained from Sigma Aldrich (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany). Sodium tungstate (Na2WO4·2H2O), sodium metasilicate (Na2SiO3·5H2O), Sodium phosphate (Na3PO4), disodium hydrogen phosphate (Na2HPO4), sodium hydroxide (NaOH), manganese chloride (MnCl2), manganous acetate tetrahydrate (Mn(OAc)2·2H2O) potassium carbonate (K2CO3), potassium persulfate (K2S2O8), hydrochloric acid (HCl), potassium chloride (KCl), germanium dioxide (GeO2), imidazole and ethanol were analytical grade and used as received. Water was purified by Millipore Milli-Q (Merck Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany).

3.1.2. Apparatus

A PHS–25B digital acidimeter (Yuechen, Shanghai, China) determined the pH value. The infrared spectra (IR) were measured on a spectrometer (Bruker Vertex 80V, Bruker, Karlsruhe, Germany). Absorption measurements (UV-vis) were completed with UV-2700 UV-Visible spectrophotometer (Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). The cyclic voltammetry curve (CV) and the linear sweep voltammetry curve (LSV) were recorded using CHI660e electrochemical workstation (Shanghai Chenhua Instrument Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis was obtained by Escalab 250 X-ray photoelectron spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MS, USA).

3.2. Preparation of Polynuclear Manganese Containing Polyoxometalates

MnxPOMs were synthesized according to the literature [13,14,15,16,17,18]. Please see supplementary information for details.

3.3. LBL Assembled Composite Film Modified Electrode

Before assembly, the substrate (ITO electrode) needed to be cleaned according to the literature [23]. The ITO was immersed in 1 M NaOH: CH3CH2OH (V:V = 1:1) mixed solution, ultrasonically for 20 min, then cleaned with water, and then dried with nitrogen for standby. Then, the composite film was assembled on the clean substrate by the LbL assembly method. First, the substrate was immersed in the positively charged PDDA (5%) solution and left to stand for 20 min. Second, the substrate was immersed in the negatively charged PSS solution for 20 min. Third, the substrate was immersed in the PDDA (5%) aqueous solution for 20 min. Fourth, the substrate was immersed in 0.5 mM MnxPOMs solution with a negative charge for 20 min. After each assembly, the substrate was washed with water 3–5 times to remove the physical adsorption substances, and then dried with nitrogen flow. After the above steps, the monolayer [PDDA/PSS/PDDA/MnxPOM] composite films were prepared. Different layers of [PDDA/PSS/PDDA/MnxPOM]n-ITO (n = 1–4) composite film modified electrodes were prepared by repeating steps 3 and 4.

3.4. UV-Vis Absorption Spectra

The fabrication process of the samples is the same as that of the LBL assembling the multilayer film modified electrode in Section 3.3. The only difference is that ITO is replaced by a quartz slide. Firstly, the quartz glass was cleaned according to the literature method [24] (different from ITO), and then assembled according to the film assembly steps, monitoring the assembly process of composite films by UV-vis absorption spectrum.

3.5. Electrochemical Test

A series of experiments were performed to study the PEC catalytic activity for water oxidation, ITO/PDDA/PSS/[PDDA/MnxPOM]n was used as the working electrode, using Ag/AgCl as a reference electrode, and a platinum wire as a counter electrode. The buffer solution was obtained from 0.5 M pH 7 CH3COONa (NaAc) solutions adjusted by CH3COOH (HAc). Before the electrochemical experiments, the oxygen in the electrolyte was removed by purging high-purity nitrogen. All the electrochemical measurements were performed on an electrochemical workstation (CHI 611E, CH Instruments Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China) at room temperature.

4. Conclusions

Via appropriate choice, six Mn-containing POMs, with different structures, composition, Mn-O clusters and oxidation state of Mn, were prepared and their electrocatalytic water oxidation performance was investigated under the same experiment conditions in solution and composite film. The fabrication of the composite films was characterized by UV-vis spectra and CVs, confirming that the MnxPOMs have been fabricated on the composite films and their electrochemical properties have been maintained very well in the composite films. Through a series of controlled experiments, the following rules were obtained: the amount and the oxidation state of Mn ions in MnxPOM affect the electrocatalytic water oxidation performance; at the same time, the structure of Mn-O clusters in MnxPOM also affects the electrocatalytic water oxidation performance. After the comparison, it is found that among the six MnxPOMs, Mn14-POM displays the highest electrocatalytic performance towards water oxidation. Such observation indicates the oxidation state of Mn and the structure of Mn-O cluster cubic structure are very important factors impacting electrocatalytic performance for the water oxidation as the oxidation state of Mn and the structure of Mn-O cluster in Mn14-POM are the same as that in the photocatalytic active center (PSII). Therefore, Therefore, this study provides a reference for further screening water oxidation catalysts with high performance.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/catal12020160/s1, Figure S1: (a) UV-vis absorption spectra of MnxPOMs (5 μM) in the aqueous solutions; (b) UV-vis spectra for the [MnxPOMs]n film on quartz slide; (c) relationship of the absorbance value and layer number at λ = 243~257 nm; Figure S2: LSV curves of OER of [Mn2-POM]1 and [MnxPOM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7, initial, after 48 days, and after potentiostatic electrolysis;; Table S1: Summary of the radio of current density and the difference of initial potential of OER;; Figure S3: XPS spectra of [Mn2-POM]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), Si2p(d), W4f(e) and O1s(f); Figure S4: XPS spectra of [Mn4-POM]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), P2p(d), W4f(e) and O1s(f); Figure S5: XPS spectra of [Mn6-POM-1]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), Ge3p(d), Ge3d(e), W4f(f) and O1s(g); Figure S6: XPS spectra of [Mn6-POM-4]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), Si2p(d), W4f(e) and O1s(f); Figure S7: XPS spectra of [Mn14-POM]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), W4f(d) and O1s(e); Figure S8: XPS spectra of [Mn19-POM]5(a), C1s(b), Mn2p(c), Si2p(d), W4f(e) and O1s(f).

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, Y.W. and L.B.; methodology, Y.W.; software, Y.W.; validation, Y.W., J.P. and X.Y.; formal analysis, Y.W.; investigation, Y.W.; data curation, Y.W.; writing—original draft preparation, Y.W.; writing—review and editing, L.B.; supervision, L.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author. The data are not publicly available due to the need of follow-up research.

Acknowledgments

Thank the co-author for their help in writing this article. Thank the reviewers for their comments and valuable opinions, and the editors for their help in publishing this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. (a) Hypothetical formation sequence for chains of [Mn2+Mn3+SiW10O38]7− building blocks linked via Mn–O–W bridges along c (blue = WO6 octahedra, green = MnO6 octahedra, yellow = SiO4 tetrahedra). Reprinted with permission from ref. [13]. Copyright 2013 Elsevier Ltd.; (b) The tetramanganese unit of [Mn4(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]9− showing atomic labels. Reprinted with permission from ref. [14]. Copyright 1995 Elsevier Science Ltd.
Figure 1. (a) Hypothetical formation sequence for chains of [Mn2+Mn3+SiW10O38]7− building blocks linked via Mn–O–W bridges along c (blue = WO6 octahedra, green = MnO6 octahedra, yellow = SiO4 tetrahedra). Reprinted with permission from ref. [13]. Copyright 2013 Elsevier Ltd.; (b) The tetramanganese unit of [Mn4(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]9− showing atomic labels. Reprinted with permission from ref. [14]. Copyright 1995 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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Figure 2. (a) Structure of the [Mn6Ge3W24O94(H2O)2]18− polyanion. Plum octahedra, {WO6}; sky blue tetrahedra, {GeO4}; yellow ball, MnII; orange ball, MnIII. (b) Structure of Mn6 unit. Reprinted with permission from ref. [15]. Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V.
Figure 2. (a) Structure of the [Mn6Ge3W24O94(H2O)2]18− polyanion. Plum octahedra, {WO6}; sky blue tetrahedra, {GeO4}; yellow ball, MnII; orange ball, MnIII. (b) Structure of Mn6 unit. Reprinted with permission from ref. [15]. Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V.
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Figure 3. (a) Structure of [MnIII2MnII43-O)2(H2O)4(B-β-SiW8O31)(B-β-SiW9O34)(γ-SiW10O36)]18−. WO6 purple polyhedra, Mn orange and brown, Si green, O red. (b) The {Mn5O6} cubane core of 1, described as an appended [MnIII2MnII2O4]2+ cubane where Mn1, Mn2, Mn3, Mn5 are connected to manganese atom Mn4 through oxygen atom O107 from the cube and oxygen atoms O2 and O15 of the {SiW9} cluster. MnII orange, MnIII brown, O red. Reprinted with permission from ref. [16] Copyright 2011 John Wiley and Sons.
Figure 3. (a) Structure of [MnIII2MnII43-O)2(H2O)4(B-β-SiW8O31)(B-β-SiW9O34)(γ-SiW10O36)]18−. WO6 purple polyhedra, Mn orange and brown, Si green, O red. (b) The {Mn5O6} cubane core of 1, described as an appended [MnIII2MnII2O4]2+ cubane where Mn1, Mn2, Mn3, Mn5 are connected to manganese atom Mn4 through oxygen atom O107 from the cube and oxygen atoms O2 and O15 of the {SiW9} cluster. MnII orange, MnIII brown, O red. Reprinted with permission from ref. [16] Copyright 2011 John Wiley and Sons.
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Figure 4. (a) Structure of Mn14-POM. MnIII, purple; MnIV, green; WO6, gray octahedra; O, red. (b) Magnetic cores of Mn7. Reprinted with permission from ref. [17] Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry 2011.
Figure 4. (a) Structure of Mn14-POM. MnIII, purple; MnIV, green; WO6, gray octahedra; O, red. (b) Magnetic cores of Mn7. Reprinted with permission from ref. [17] Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry 2011.
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Figure 5. Structure of the Mn19-oxo-hydroxo core in Mn19-POM. Protonated oxygen atoms are shown in pink. WO6 red octahedra, Si blue balls, Mn yellow balls, O red balls. Reprinted with permission from ref. [18]. Copyright 2011 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Figure 5. Structure of the Mn19-oxo-hydroxo core in Mn19-POM. Protonated oxygen atoms are shown in pink. WO6 red octahedra, Si blue balls, Mn yellow balls, O red balls. Reprinted with permission from ref. [18]. Copyright 2011 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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Figure 6. The IR spectra of (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM.
Figure 6. The IR spectra of (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM.
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Figure 7. (a) CV curves of Mn2-POM (0.2 mM) in pH 3 (0.5 M Na2SO4 + H2SO4), scan rate 25 mV/s; (b) CV curves of Mn4-POM (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (c) CV curves of Mn6-POM-1 (0.1 mM) in pH 7 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (d) CV curves of Mn6-POM-4 (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (e) CV curves of Mn14-POM (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (f) CV curves of Mn19-POM (0.04 mM) in pH 5 (1 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 10 mV/s.
Figure 7. (a) CV curves of Mn2-POM (0.2 mM) in pH 3 (0.5 M Na2SO4 + H2SO4), scan rate 25 mV/s; (b) CV curves of Mn4-POM (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (c) CV curves of Mn6-POM-1 (0.1 mM) in pH 7 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (d) CV curves of Mn6-POM-4 (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (e) CV curves of Mn14-POM (0.1 mM) in pH 5 (0.5 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 50 mV/s; (f) CV curves of Mn19-POM (0.04 mM) in pH 5 (1 M NaAc-HAc), scan rate 10 mV/s.
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Figure 8. CV curves of 0.1 mM (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at different pH (5/6/7), scan rate 50 mV/s.
Figure 8. CV curves of 0.1 mM (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at different pH (5/6/7), scan rate 50 mV/s.
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Figure 9. UV-vis spectra for (a) [Mn2-POM]n, (b) [Mn4-POM]n, (c) [Mn6-POM-1]n, (d) [Mn6-POM-4]n, (e) [Mn14-POM]n and (f) [Mn19-POM]n film on quartz slide (n = 1–5).
Figure 9. UV-vis spectra for (a) [Mn2-POM]n, (b) [Mn4-POM]n, (c) [Mn6-POM-1]n, (d) [Mn6-POM-4]n, (e) [Mn14-POM]n and (f) [Mn19-POM]n film on quartz slide (n = 1–5).
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Figure 10. OER CV curves of 0.1 mM (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
Figure 10. OER CV curves of 0.1 mM (a) Mn2-POM, (b) Mn4-POM, (c) Mn6-POM-1, (d) Mn6-POM-4, (e) Mn14-POM and (f) Mn19-POM in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
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Figure 11. (a) CV curves of [MnxPOM]n film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7 (the inner graph is the relationship between the oxidation peak current of MnII/IV and the number of assembled layers.) (b) LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]n (n = 1/2/3 or 4) film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
Figure 11. (a) CV curves of [MnxPOM]n film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7 (the inner graph is the relationship between the oxidation peak current of MnII/IV and the number of assembled layers.) (b) LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]n (n = 1/2/3 or 4) film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
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Figure 12. (a) LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7; (b) The locally enlarged graph of LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]3 film electrode.
Figure 12. (a) LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7; (b) The locally enlarged graph of LSV curves of OER of [MnxPOM]3 film electrode.
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Figure 13. LSV curves of OER of [Mn14POM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7, the black line is the initial, the red line is after 48 days, and the blue line is after potentiostatic electrolysis. The inset shows the current time curve of [Mn14POM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
Figure 13. LSV curves of OER of [Mn14POM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7, the black line is the initial, the red line is after 48 days, and the blue line is after potentiostatic electrolysis. The inset shows the current time curve of [Mn14POM]3 film electrode in NaAc/HAc buffer (0.5 M) at pH = 7.
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Table 1. Summary of Mn ion valence in MnxPOMs.
Table 1. Summary of Mn ion valence in MnxPOMs.
AbbreviationChemical FormulaN (MnII)N (MnIII)N (MnIV)Total N (Mn)
Mn2-POM[MnIIMnIIISiW10O37(OH)(H2O)]6−1102
Mn4-POM[MnII3MnIII(H2O)2(PW9O34)2]9−3104
Mn6-POM-1[MnII4MnIII2Ge3W24O94(H2O)2]18−4206
Mn6-POM-4[MnIII2MnII43-O)2(H2O)4(B-β-SiW8O31)(B-β-SiW9O34)(γ-SiW10O36)]18−4206
Mn14-POM[{MnIII3MnIV4O4(OH)2(OH2)}2(W6O22)(H2W8O32)2(H4W13O46)2]26−06814
Mn19-POM[MnII19 (OH)12(SiW10O37)6]34−190019
Table 2. Summary of oxygen evolution reaction current density.
Table 2. Summary of oxygen evolution reaction current density.
MnxPOMsCurrent Density (μA cm−2)
E = 1.4 V
Current Density (μA cm−2)
E = 1.5 V
Mn2-POM75.73143.2
Mn4-POM72.93143.4
Mn6-POM-140.57111.87
Mn6-POM-446.69160.2
Mn14-POM150.33195.2
Mn19-POM102.6173.07
Table 3. Summary of initial potential of oxygen evolution reaction.
Table 3. Summary of initial potential of oxygen evolution reaction.
MnxPOMsCurrent Density (μA cm−2) E = 1.4 VE (V)on
Mn2-POM36.311.28
Mn4-POM11.981.26
Mn6-POM-113.221.22
Mn6-POM-429.731.07
Mn14-POM250.970.92
Mn19-POM59.511.04
Table 4. Comparison of electrocatalytic water oxidation properties of different manganese containing POM.
Table 4. Comparison of electrocatalytic water oxidation properties of different manganese containing POM.
MnxPOMsCurrent Density (μA cm−2) E = 1.5 VRef.
Mn16-Cs cca. 244.4[9]
NaK-Mn4 bca. 83[10]
Mn14-POM a479.2this work
a Conditions: ITO (S = 1.5 cm2), LBL (n = 4), 0.5 M NaAc + HAc (pH 7), Scan rate: 50 mV/s; b Conditions: ITO (S = 3 cm2), LBL (n = 4), 1 M NaAc + HAc (pH 7), Scan rate: 50 mV/s; c Conditions: ITO (S = 1.35 cm2), LBL (n = 4), 0.5 M NaAc + HAc (pH 7), Scan rate: 50 mV/s.
Table 5. Comparison of electrocatalytic water oxidation properties of noble catalysts with Mn14-POM.
Table 5. Comparison of electrocatalytic water oxidation properties of noble catalysts with Mn14-POM.
CatalystsEonset (V) vs. Ag/AgClE(V) (Current Density = 400 μA cm−2)Ref.
Pt b0.891.02[22]
IrO2 b0.890.99[22]
Mn14-POM a0.921.41this work
a Conditions: ITO (S = 1.5 cm2), LBL (n = 4), 0.5 M NaAc + HAc (pH 7), Scan rate: 50 mV/s; b Conditions: 0.1 M PBS (pH = 7), Scan rate: 5 mV/s.
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Wu, Y.; Pei, J.; Yu, X.; Bi, L. Study on Catalytic Water Oxidation Properties of Polynuclear Manganese Containing Polyoxometalates. Catalysts 2022, 12, 160. https://doi.org/10.3390/catal12020160

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Wu Y, Pei J, Yu X, Bi L. Study on Catalytic Water Oxidation Properties of Polynuclear Manganese Containing Polyoxometalates. Catalysts. 2022; 12(2):160. https://doi.org/10.3390/catal12020160

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Wu, Yue, Jianye Pei, Xiaoxia Yu, and Lihua Bi. 2022. "Study on Catalytic Water Oxidation Properties of Polynuclear Manganese Containing Polyoxometalates" Catalysts 12, no. 2: 160. https://doi.org/10.3390/catal12020160

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