Pulsed-Laser and Mechanical Reduction of Graphene Oxide Combined with NiCoFeMoW High-Entropy Alloys for Electrocatalytic Oxygen Evolution Reaction

Hossein Mahdavi, Omer Şamil Akcan, Yağız Morova, M. Barış Yağcı, Uğur Ünal*, Hadi Jahangiri*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

The development of cost-effective and high-performance electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction is critical for sustainable energy conversion technologies. In this study, graphene oxide is subjected to two distinct reduction techniques: nanosecond pulsed-laser irradiation and high-energy ball-milling. Structural characterization reveals that laser treatment led to partial reduction, while mechanical treatment achieves a higher degree of reduction. The treatments induce morphological transformations, with laser-irradiated samples exhibiting localized “wrinkling” due to thermal effects, whereas high-energy ball-milling induced “folding” resulted from prolonged mechanical stress. The electrocatalytic performance of reduced graphene oxide is further enhanced by incorporating a NiCoFeMoW high-entropy alloy, prepared by mechanical alloying technique. Electrochemical evaluation demonstrated that the heterostructures exhibited superior electrocatalytic activity, achieving an overpotential of 141.8 mV at 10 mA·cm2 for the best sample. These findings underscore the potential of reduced graphene oxide-supported high-entropy alloys as a promising alternative to noble-metal-based electrocatalysts, offering a scalable and environment-friendly approach for advancing water-splitting technologies.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202500466
JournalChemSusChem
Volume18
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Jul 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). ChemSusChem published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.

Keywords

  • high-energy ball milling
  • high-entropy alloys
  • oxygen evolution reaction
  • pulsed- laser irradiation
  • reduced graphene oxide

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