4.6 Article

Fast and Stable Electrochemical Production of H2O2 by Electrode Architecture Engineering

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 20, Pages 7120-7129

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c01468

Keywords

superaerophilic electrode; hydrogen peroxide; electrocataysis; Fenton-like process; oxygen reduction reaction

Funding

  1. Ningbo S&T Innovation 2025 Major Special Program [2020Z059, 2020Z107]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Ningbo [2019A610442, 202003N4351]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M662124, 2019M662127]
  4. Hundred Talents Programs in Chinese Academy of Science
  5. High-Performance Computing Center of Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures, Nanjing University
  6. BoXin project [BX20190339]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

An integrated and superaerophilic electrode composed of atomically dispersed Ni-O-C site-enriched carbon nanosheets has been developed for fast and stable production of hydrogen peroxide through electrochemical pathways. The electrode shows low overpotential and high selectivity in a neutral electrolyte, with high current density and superior stability. This electrode has potential applications in fast degradation of organic pollutants in wastewater treatment processes.
Fast and stable production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) through electrochemical pathways is crucial for wastewater treatment applications. With this objective, herein, we report an integrated and superaerophilic electrode composed of atomically dispersed Ni-O-C site-enriched carbon nanosheets (IS-NiOC electrode) for electrochemical oxygen reduction to produce H2O2. Both experimental and theoretical results have proven that atomically dispersed Ni-O-C sites enable a low overpotential (260 mV at 0.1 mA cm(-2)) and high selectivity (>90% at 0.0-0.5 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE)) in a neutral electrolyte. Compared with a commercial gas-diffusion electrode, the IS-NiOC electrode offers stronger affinity to oxygen bubbles and more robust three-phase contact points, resulting in high current density (similar to 106 mA cm(-2) at 0.25 V vs RHE) and superior stability (similar to 200 h). These merits allow the application of the IS-NiOC electrode in an electro-Fenton-like process, which enables fast degradation of representative organic pollutants in both a steady state and a flow state.

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