4.8 Article

Relation between Water Oxidation Activity and Coordination Environment of C,N-Coordinated Mononuclear Co Catalyst

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 491-496

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.1c04644

Keywords

electrocatalysis; water splitting; water oxidation; mononuclear catalyst; coordination environment; structure-activity relationship

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [22088102]
  2. LiaoNing Revitalization Talents Program [XLYC2007002]
  3. Dalian Youth Science and Technology Program [2019RQ022]

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By studying the water oxidation catalysis of mononuclear Co catalysts with different structures incorporated into a graphene matrix, it was found that the CoCN3Cl structure exhibited the best performance due to the increased binding strength between the Co site and reaction intermediates. This work demonstrates the importance of the coordination environment of the metal nucleus in catalysts for manipulating the rate-determining step and optimizing activity in the oxygen evolution reaction.
Understanding the structure-activity relationship of an active site is of great significance toward the rational design of highly active catalysts. Herein, we present a combined experimental and theoretical study on water oxidation catalysis of mononuclear Co catalysts with CoN4Cl, CoCN3Cl, and CoC4Cl motifs incorporated into a graphene matrix. We found that the catalyst with the CoCN3Cl structure exhibits an overpotential of 359 mV at 10 mA/cm(2) for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), much lower than those of catalysts with CoC4Cl (396 mV) and CoN4Cl structure (>500 mV). By introducing the binding strength between the Co site and reaction intermediates (OH*, O* and OOH*) as the reaction descriptor, we revealed that the binding strength for Co = O* in these structures is getting stronger when N is replaced by the C atom, which plays a crucial role in the rate-determining step (RDS) and water oxidation performance. The Co site distinctively coordinated with the CN3Cl structure gives rise to the most suitable binding strength of Co = O* and consequently the highest OER performance (RDS: Co-OH* -> Co = O*), much better than that coordinated by C4Cl with a strong binding strength (RDS: Co = O* -> Co-OOH*) and N4Cl with a weak binding strength (RDS: Co-OH* -> Co = O*). This work further demonstrates the importance of the coordination environment of the metal nucleus in catalysts for RDS manipulation and activity optimization in OER through modulating the binding strength between active site and reaction intermediates.

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