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MO-Co@N-Doped Carbon (M = Zn or Co): Vital Roles of Inactive Zn and Highly Efficient Activity toward Oxygen Reduction/Evolution Reactions for Rechargeable Zn–Air Battery

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TLDR
In this paper, the MO-Co@N-doped carbon (NC, M = Zn or Co) is developed as a highly active ORR/OER bifunctional catalyst via pyrolysis of a bimetal metal-organic framework containing Zn and Co, i.e., precursor (CoZn).
Abstract
A highly efficient bifunctional oxygen catalyst is required for practical applications of fuel cells and metal–air batteries, as oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) are their core electrode reactions. Here, the MO-Co@N-doped carbon (NC, M = Zn or Co) is developed as a highly active ORR/OER bifunctional catalyst via pyrolysis of a bimetal metal–organic framework containing Zn and Co, i.e., precursor (CoZn). The vital roles of inactive Zn in developing highly active bifunctional oxygen catalysts are unraveled. When the precursors include Zn, the surface contents of pyridinic N for ORR and the surface contents of Co–Nx and Co3+/Co2+ ratios for OER are enhanced, while the high specific surface areas, high porosity, and high electrochemical active surface areas are also achieved. Furthermore, the synergistic effects between Zn-based and Co-based species can promote the well growth of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) at high pyrolysis temperatures (≥700 °C), which is favorable for charge transfer. The optimized CoZn-NC-700 shows the highly bifunctional ORR/OER activity and the excellent durability during the ORR/OER processes, even better than 20 wt% Pt/C (for ORR) and IrO2 (for OER). CoZn-NC-700 also exhibits the prominent Zn–air battery performance and even outperforms the mixture of 20 wt% Pt/C and IrO2.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

MgO-Co/N-doped carbon with inactive MgO enhancing electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen evolution and reduction reactions

TL;DR: MgO-Co/N-doped carbon (NC) was developed by a facile two-step pyrolysis method as discussed by the authors, which achieved high ratios of O vacancy/total O (~0.46), graphitic-N/total N (~ 0.30) and Co3+/Co0 (~10.33), thus benefitting OER activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerative oxygen evolution by Cu-doping into Fe-Co oxides

TL;DR: In this article, a facile sol-gel strategy was developed to fabricate a ternary Fe-Co-Cu oxide for efficient electrocatalysis of water oxidation, achieving low overpotentials of 256, 271, and 226 mV at 10 mA cm−2.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen-doped carbon nanotube arrays with high electrocatalytic activity for oxygen reduction.

TL;DR: It is reported that vertically aligned nitrogen-containing carbon nanotubes (VA-NCNTs) can act as a metal-free electrode with a much better electrocatalytic activity, long-term operation stability, and tolerance to crossover effect than platinum for oxygen reduction in alkaline fuel cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benchmarking Heterogeneous Electrocatalysts for the Oxygen Evolution Reaction

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report a protocol for evaluating the activity, stability, and Faradaic efficiency of electrodeposited oxygen-evolving electrocatalysts for water oxidation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design of electrocatalysts for oxygen- and hydrogen-involving energy conversion reactions

TL;DR: The emphasis of this review is on the origin of the electrocatalytic activity of nanostructured catalysts toward a series of key clean energy conversion reactions by correlating the apparent electrode performance with their intrinsic electrochemical properties.
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A perovskite oxide optimized for oxygen evolution catalysis from molecular orbital principles.

TL;DR: The high activity of BSCF was predicted from a design principle established by systematic examination of more than 10 transition metal oxides, which showed that the intrinsic OER activity exhibits a volcano-shaped dependence on the occupancy of the 3d electron with an eg symmetry of surface transition metal cations in an oxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Active sites of nitrogen-doped carbon materials for oxygen reduction reaction clarified using model catalysts

TL;DR: In this paper, the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) active site was characterized by using newly designed graphite (highly oriented pyrolitic graphite) model catalysts with well-defined π conjugation and well-controlled doping of N species.
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