4.7 Article

Xerogel-Derived Manganese Oxide/N-Doped Carbon as a Non-Precious Metal-Based Oxygen Reduction Reaction Catalyst in Microbial Fuel Cells for Energy Conversion Applications

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano13222949

Keywords

xerogel; MnO2; coffee carbon; N-doped carbon; ORR; cathode catalyst; microbial fuel cells (MFCs)

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This study presents a novel strategy for synthesizing nano-sized MnO nanoparticles and evaluates their physicochemical and electrochemical properties. The resulting MnO/N-doped carbon catalysts exhibit excellent crystallinity, adequate surface area and porosity, enhanced ORR activity, and excellent stability.
Current study provides a novel strategy to synthesize the nano-sized MnO nanoparticles from the quick, ascendable, sol-gel synthesis strategy. The MnO nanoparticles are supported on nitrogen-doped carbon derived from the cheap sustainable source. The resulting MnO/N-doped carbon catalysts developed in this study are systematically evaluated via several physicochemical and electrochemical characterizations. The physicochemical characterizations confirms that the crystalline MnO nanoparticles are successfully synthesized and are supported on N-doped carbons, ascertained from the X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopic studies. In addition, the developed MnO/N-doped carbon catalyst was also found to have adequate surface area and porosity, similar to the traditional Pt/C catalyst. Detailed investigations on the effect of the nitrogen precursor, heat treatment temperature, and N-doped carbon support on the ORR activity is established in 0.1 M of HClO4. It was found that the MnO/N-doped carbon catalysts showed enhanced ORR activity with a half-wave potential of 0.69 V vs. RHE, with nearly four electron transfers and excellent stability with just a loss of 10 mV after 20,000 potential cycles. When analyzed as an ORR catalyst in dual-chamber microbial fuel cells (DCMFC) with Nafion 117 membrane as the electrolyte, the MnO/N-doped carbon catalyst exhibited a volumetric power density of similar to 45 mW m(2) and a 60% degradation of organic matter in 30 days of continuous operation.

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