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Hierarchical cobalt-nitride and -oxide co-doped porous carbon nanostructures for highly efficient and durable bifunctional oxygen reaction electrocatalysts

Authors
Lee, Kyung JinShin, Dong YunByeon, AyeongLim, AhyounJo, Young SukBegley, AlinaLim, Dong-HeeSung, Yung-EunPark, Hyun S.Chae, Keun HwaNam, Suk WooLee, Kwan-YoungKim, Jin Young
Issue Date
7-Nov-2017
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Citation
NANOSCALE, v.9, no.41, pp.15846 - 15855
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NANOSCALE
Volume
9
Number
41
Start Page
15846
End Page
15855
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/81575
DOI
10.1039/c7nr06646e
ISSN
2040-3364
Abstract
Here we report the preparation of hollow microspheres with a thin shell composed of mixed cobalt nitride (Co-N) and cobalt oxide (Co-O) nanofragments encapsulated in thin layers of nitrogen-doped carbon (N-C) nanostructure (Co-N/Co-O@N-C) arrays with enhanced bifunctional oxygen electrochemical performance. The hybrid structures are synthesized via heat treatment of N-doped hollow carbon microspheres with cobalt nitrate, and both the specific ratio of these precursors and the selected annealing temperature are found to be the key factors for the formation of the unique hybrid structure. The as-obtained product (Co-N/Co-O@N-C) presents a large specific surface area (493 m(2) g(-1)), high-level heteroatom doping (Co-N, Co-O, and N-C), and hierarchical porous nanoarchitecture containing macroporous frameworks and mesoporous walls. Electronic interaction between the thin N-C layers and the encapsulated Co-N and Co-O nanofragments efficiently optimizes oxygen adsorption properties on the Co-N/Co-O@N-C and thereby triggers bifunctional oxygen electrochemical activity at the surface. The Co-N/Co-O@N-C nanohybrid exhibited a high onset potential of 0.93 V, and a limiting current density of 5.6 mA cm(-2) indicating 4-electron oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), afforded high catalytic activity for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and even exceeded the catalytic stability of the commercial precious electrocatalysts; furthermore, when integrated into the oxygen electrode of a regenerative fuel cell device, it exhibited high-performance oxygen electrodes for both the ORR and the OER.
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