Catalysts for oxygen reduction and evolution reactions are at the heart of key renewable-energy technologies including fuel cells and water splitting. Despite tremendous efforts, developing oxygen electrode catalysts with high activity at low cost remains a great challenge. Here, we report a hybrid material consisting of Co₃O₄ nanocrystals grown on reduced graphene oxide as a high-performance bi-functional catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Although Co₃O₄ or graphene oxide alone has little catalytic activity, their hybrid exhibits an unexpected, surprisingly high ORR activity that is further enhanced by nitrogen doping of graphene. The Co₃O₄/N-doped graphene hybrid exhibits similar catalytic activity but superior stability to Pt in alkaline solutions. The same hybrid is also highly active for OER, making it a high-performance non-precious metal-based bi-catalyst for both ORR and OER. The unusual catalytic activity arises from synergetic chemical coupling effects between Co₃O₄ and graphene.
Highly active, durable, and cost-effective electrocatalysts for water oxidation to evolve oxygen gas hold a key to a range of renewable energy solutions, including water-splitting and rechargeable metal-air batteries. Here, we report the synthesis of ultrathin nickel-iron layered double hydroxide (NiFe-LDH) nanoplates on mildly oxidized multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Incorporation of Fe into the nickel hydroxide induced the formation of NiFe-LDH. The crystalline NiFe-LDH phase in nanoplate form is found to be highly active for oxygen evolution reaction in alkaline solutions. For NiFe-LDH grown on a network of CNTs, the resulting NiFe-LDH/CNT complex exhibits higher electrocatalytic activity and stability for oxygen evolution than commercial precious metal Ir catalysts.
Earth-abundant first-row (3d) transition metal-based catalysts have been developed for the oxygen-evolution reaction (OER); however, they operate at overpotentials substantially above thermodynamic requirements. Density functional theory suggested that non-3d high-valency metals such as tungsten can modulate 3d metal oxides, providing near-optimal adsorption energies for OER intermediates. We developed a room-temperature synthesis to produce gelled oxyhydroxides materials with an atomically homogeneous metal distribution. These gelled FeCoW oxyhydroxides exhibit the lowest overpotential (191 millivolts) reported at 10 milliamperes per square centimeter in alkaline electrolyte. The catalyst shows no evidence of degradation after more than 500 hours of operation. X-ray absorption and computational studies reveal a synergistic interplay between tungsten, iron, and cobalt in producing a favorable local coordination environment and electronic structure that enhance the energetics for OER.
Through direct nanoparticle nucleation and growth on nitrogen doped, reduced graphene oxide sheets and cation substitution of spinel Co(3)O(4) nanoparticles, a manganese-cobalt spinel MnCo(2)O(4)/graphene hybrid was developed as a highly efficient electrocatalyst for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in alkaline conditions. Electrochemical and X-ray near-edge structure (XANES) investigations revealed that the nucleation and growth method for forming inorganic-nanocarbon hybrids results in covalent coupling between spinel oxide nanoparticles and N-doped reduced graphene oxide (N-rmGO) sheets. Carbon K-edge and nitrogen K-edge XANES showed strongly perturbed C-O and C-N bonding in the N-rmGO sheet, suggesting the formation of C-O-metal and C-N-metal bonds between N-doped graphene oxide and spinel oxide nanoparticles. Co L-edge and Mn L-edge XANES suggested substitution of Co(3+) sites by Mn(3+), which increased the activity of the catalytic sites in the hybrid materials, further boosting the ORR activity compared with the pure cobalt oxide hybrid. The covalently bonded hybrid afforded much greater activity and durability than the physical mixture of nanoparticles and carbon materials including N-rmGO. At the same mass loading, the MnCo(2)O(4)/N-graphene hybrid can outperform Pt/C in ORR current density at medium overpotentials with stability superior to Pt/C in alkaline solutions.
As energy demand continues to increase, so too do anthropogenic carbon emissions and global temperatures. Renewable energy sources such as solar, wind and hydroelectricity displace fossil fuel carbon emissions and continue to progress to wider deployment. However, long-term (seasonal) energy storage remains a challenge that must be addressed for renewables to meet a major fraction of global energy demand 1 . Carbon dioxide electroreduction to renewable fuels and feedstocks provides an energy storage solution to the seasonal variability of renewable energy sources 2 . When coupled with carbon capture technology, the carbon dioxide reduction reaction (CO 2 RR) offers a means to close the carbon cycle.CO 2 RR electrocatalysts lower energetic barriers to CO 2 reduction by stabilizing intermediates and transition states in the multistep electrochemical reduction process 3 . Copper reduces CO 2 to a wide range of hydrocarbon products such as methane, ethylene, ethanol and propanol 4 . Unfortunately, bulk copper is not selective among various carbon products, and it also suffers Faradaic efficiency (FE) losses to the competing hydrogen evolution reaction.Among possible products, C2+ hydrocarbons are highly sought in view of their commercial value. Ethylene, for example, is a precursor to the production of polyethylene, a major plastic. Selectively producing ethylene over methane circumvents costly paraffin-olefin separation 5 . Developing catalysts that work at ambient conditions to produce C2 selectively over C1 gaseous products will increase the relevance of renewable feedstocks in the chemical sector.Oxide-derived copper is one class of catalyst that has shown enhanced CO 2 RR activity and increased selectivity towards multi-carbon products [6][7][8] . The selectivity of these catalysts is dependent on structural morphology and copper oxidation state 9-17 . Electrochemical reduction of copper oxide catalyst films can lead to grain boundaries, undercoordinated sites and roughened surfaces that are hypothesized to be catalytically active sites 8,18 . Residual oxides, proposed to play a key role in catalysis, may exist after electrochemical reduction 7 . A recent report of oxygen plasma-activated oxide-derived copper catalysts achieved an ethylene FE of 60% at − 0.9 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) 9 , with activity attributed to the presence of Cu + species. In situ hard X-ray absorption spectroscopy (hXAS) experiments have suggested stable Cu + species exist at highly negative CO 2 RR potentials of ~− 1.0 versus RHE 9 . However, the presence of Cu + species during CO 2 RR is still the subject of debate; 7,19 and in situ tracking of the copper oxidation state with time resolution during CO 2 RR has remained elusive.Morphological effects of copper nanostructures have a significant effect on the selectivity of CO 2 RR to multi-carbon products [20][21][22][23][24] . Copper catalysts with different morphologies have been synthesized through annealing, chemical treatments on thin films, colloidal synthesis and ...
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