The pore structures of carbons profoundly affect their properties and functions. The hard template method has been extensively employed to fabricate porous carbons. Generally, the heteroatoms of porous carbons remarkably boost their performances, thus various of strategies have been carried out to incorporate the heteroatoms into porous carbons. The usual hard templates, such as silica nanoparticle and polystyrene sphere, only function as a pore‐forming agent. Herein, nanoscale melamine resin spheres (NMRSs) are fabricated for the first time. NMRSs can be decomposed to generate the template mesopore in situ during the pyrolysis of carbon precursors. Moreover, NMRSs also can work as a nitrogen‐dopant for porous carbons. As a demonstration, the N,P‐codoped hierarchically porous carbons are prepared using NMRSs as both pore‐forming agent and dopant, which exhibit excellent catalytic performances for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), close to or better than those of the best performing metal‐free doped carbon catalysts for the ORR. Therefore, this bifunctional template paves a facile pathway to fabricate porous carbons.
The hierarchical pore structures of carbon are important for the diffusion-limited applications. The macro/mesopores of carbon are often produced by the template while the micropores originate from the pyrolysis shrinkage...
Porous carbons fabricated by self-template approach inherit the pore features of template, but they almost exhibit no evenly dispersed mesopores, which are significant for the diffusion-limited applications. Herein, the N-doped...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.