Glassy carbon is widely used in electrochemistry due to its properties of high temperature resistance, hardness, low density and low electrical resistance. The present study focuses on the chemical resistance under electrochemical oxidative conditions, which occur under oxygen-involving reactions like oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The electrochemical performance of glassy carbon investigated in alkaline, neutral and acidic media reveal the same chemical processes during the OER but showing different degradation mechanism. The electrochemical signature of the corrosion in different media could be directly associated with the formation of oxygen functional groups determined by spectroscopic methods like Raman, infrared (IR) and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The morphology change of the carbon surface caused by carbon oxidation was investigated by microscopy. A rough surface was obtained in the acidic case, whereas dents were seen in alkaline media. It is assumed that the glassy carbon electrode in acidic media degrades by forming surface oxides by acid catalyzed process leading to ring opening in the graphitic structure and therefore oxidation in the bulk. In alkaline media OH radicals preferentially react with alkyl site chains, leading to oxidation of the edges of carbon layers until they become hydrophilic and dissolve
Nanocarbon can promote robust and
efficient electrocatalytic water
oxidation through active surface oxygen moieties. The recent mechanistic
understandings (e.g., active sites) of metal-free carbon catalysts
in oxygen evolution reaction (OER), however, are still rife with controversies.
In this work, we describe a facile protocol in which eight kinds of
aromatic molecules with designated single oxygen species were used
as model structures to investigate the explicit roles of each common
oxygen group in OER at a molecular level. These model structures were
decorated onto typical nanocarbon surfaces like onion-like carbons
(OLC) or multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) to build aromatic molecule-modified
carbon systems. We show that edge (including zigzag and armchair)
quinones in a conjugated π network are the true active centers,
and the roles of ether and carboxyl groups are excluded in the OER
process. The plausible rate-determining step could be singled out
by H/D kinetic isotope effects. The turnover frequency per CO
(∼0.323 s–1 at η = 340 mV) in 0.1 M
KOH and the optimized current density (10 mA/cm2 at 1.58
V vs RHE) of quinone-modified carbon systems are comparable to those
of promising metal-based catalysts.
Nitrogen (N)-doped nanocarbons (NDN) as metal-free catalysts
have
elicited considerable attention toward selective oxidation of alcohols
with easily oxidizable groups to aldehydes in the past few years.
However, finding a new NDN catalytic material that can meet the requirement
of the feasibility on the aerobic catalytics for other complicated
alcohols is a big challenge. The real active sites and the corresponding
mechanisms on NDN are still unambiguous because of inevitable coexistence
of diverse edge sites and N species based on recently reported doping
methods. Here, four NDN catalysts with enriched pyridinic N species
and without any graphitic N species are simply fabricated via a chemical-vapor-deposition-like method. The results
of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption near-edge
structure spectra suggest that the dominating N species on NDN are
pyridinic N. It is demonstrated that NDN catalysts perform impressive
reactivity for aerobic oxidation of complicated alcohols at an atmospheric
pressure. Eleven kinds of aromatic molecules with single N species
and tunable π conjugation systems are used as model catalysts
to experimentally identify the actual role of each N species at a
real molecular level. It is suggested that pyridinic N species play
an unexpected role in catalytic reactions. Neighboring carbon atoms
in pyridinic N species are responsible for facilitating the rate-determining
step process clarified by kinetic isotope effects, in situ nuclear magnetic resonance, in situ attenuated
total reflectance infrared, and theoretical calculation. Moreover,
NDN catalysts exhibit a good catalytic feasibility on the synthesis
of important natural products (e.g., intermediates
of vitamin E and K3) from phenol oxidation.
By taking inspiration from the catalytic properties of single‐site catalysts and the enhancement of performance through ionic liquids on metal catalysts, we exploited a scalable way to place single cobalt ions on a carbon‐nanotube surface bridged by polymerized ionic liquid. Single dispersed cobalt ions coordinated by ionic liquid are used as heterogeneous catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Performance data reveals high activity and stable operation without chemical instability.
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.