4.8 Article

Rational Design of Spinel Cobalt Vanadate Oxide Co2VO4 for Superior Electrocatalysis

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.201907168

Keywords

fuel cells; oxygen reduction; spinel cobalt vanadate oxide

Funding

  1. National Outstanding Youth Science Fund Project of National Natural Science Foundation of China [51722103]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51571149, 21576202, 21773124]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin City [19JCJQJC61900]
  4. Fok Ying Tung Education Foundation [151008]
  5. Australian Research Council (ARC) [FL170100154, DP170104464, DP160104866]
  6. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities Nankai University [63196010]

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Electrochemical energy devices, such as fuel cells and metal-air batteries, convert chemical energy directly into electricity without adverse environmental impact. Attractive alternatives to expensive noble metals used in these renewable energy technologies are earth-abundant transition metal oxides. However, they are often limited by catalytic and conductive capabilities. Here reported is a spinel oxide, Co2VO4, by marrying metallic vanadium atomic chains with electroactive cobalt cations for superior oxygen reduction reaction (ORR)-a key process for fuel cells, metal-air batteries, etc. The experimental and simulated electron energy-loss spectroscopy analyses reveal that Co2+ cations at the octahedral sites take the low spin state with one e(g) electron (t2g6eg1), favoring advantageous ORR energetics. Measurement of actual electrical conductivity confirms that Co2VO4 has several orders of magnitude increase when compared with benchmark cobalt oxides. As a result, a zinc-air battery with new spinel cobalt vanadate oxide as the ORR catalyst shows excellent performance, together with a record-high discharge peak power density of 380 mW cm(-2). Crucially, this is superior to state-of-the-art Pt/C-based device and is greatest among zinc-air batteries assembled with metal, metal oxide, and carbon catalysts. The findings present a new design strategy for highly active and conductive oxide materials for a wide range of electrocatalytic applications, including ORR, oxygen evolution, and hydrogen evolution reactions.

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