4.8 Article

Dual Single-Atomic Ni-N4and Fe-N4Sites Constructing Janus Hollow Graphene for Selective Oxygen Electrocatalysis

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 30, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202003134

Keywords

bifunctional electrocatalysis; Janus catalysts; single atoms; Zn-air batteries

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21875112, 21902078]
  2. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DE150101306, LP160100927]
  3. Faculty of Science Strategic Investment Funding of University of Newcastle
  4. CSIRO Newcastle Energy Centre
  5. National and Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Biomedical Functional Materials
  6. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

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Nitrogen-coordinated metal single atoms in carbon have aroused extensive interest recently and have been growing as an active research frontier in a wide range of key renewable energy reactions and devices. Herein, a step-by-step self-assembly strategy is developed to allocate nickel (Ni) and iron (Fe) single atoms respectively on the inner and outer walls of graphene hollow nanospheres (GHSs), realizing separate-sided different single-atom functionalization of hollow graphene. The Ni or Fe single atom is demonstrated to be coordinated with four N atoms via the formation of a Ni-N(4)or Fe-N(4)planar configuration. The developed Ni-N-4/GHSs/Fe-N(4)Janus material exhibits excellent bifunctional electrocatalytic performance, in which the outer Fe-N(4)clusters dominantly contribute to high activity toward the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), while the inner Ni-N(4)clusters are responsible for excellent activity toward the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Density functional theory calculations demonstrate the structures and reactivities of Fe-N(4)and Ni-N(4)for the ORR and OER. The Ni-N-4/GHSs/Fe-N(4)endows a rechargeable Zn-air battery with excellent energy efficiency and cycling stability as an air-cathode, outperforming that of the benchmark Pt/C+RuO(2)air-cathode. The current work paves a new avenue for precise control of single-atom sites on carbon surface for the high-performance and selective electrocatalysts.

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