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The development of effective and stable non-precious catalysts for hydrogenation of ester to diols remains a challenge. Herein, the catalytic hydrogenation of ethyl lactate (EL) to 1,2-propanediol (1,2-PDO) with supported Co catalysts derived from layered double hydroxides (LDHs) is investigated. Catalytic tests reveal that LDH-derived Co catalysts exhibit the best catalytic performance with 98 % of EL conversion and >99 % of 1,2-PDO selectivity at mild conditions, compared with other Co catalysts (supported on Al2O3, and TiO2) and LDH-derived Cu catalysts. Due to the strong interaction among Co and Al matrix, the main composition is metallic Co0 and CoO after reduction at 600 °C. Besides, the catalyst shows good recyclability in the liquid phase hydrogenation. The superior catalytic performance can be attributed to the synergistic effect between Co0 and CoO, in which H2 molecule is activated on Co0 and EL is strongly adsorbed on CoO via hydroxyl groups.
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Iridium (Ir)-based electrocatalysts are widely explored as benchmarks for acidic oxygen evolution reactions (OERs). However, further enhancing their catalytic activity remains challenging due to the difficulty in identifying active species and unfavorable architectures. In this work, we synthesized ultrathin Ir-IrOx/C nanosheets with ordered interlayer space for enhanced OER by a nanoconfined self-assembly strategy, employing block copolymer formed stable end-merged lamellar micelles. The interlayer distance of the prepared Ir-IrOx/C nanosheets was well controlled at â¼20 nm and Ir-IrOx nanoparticles (â¼2 nm) were uniformly distributed within the nanosheets. Importantly, the fabricated Ir-IrOx/C electrocatalysts display one of the lowest overpotential (η) of 198 mV at 10 mA cm-2geo during OER in an acid medium, benefiting from their features of mixed-valence states, rich electrophilic oxygen species (O(II-δ)-), and favorable mesostructured architectures. Both experimental and computational results reveal that the mixed valence and O(II-δ)- moieties of the 2D mesoporous Ir-IrOx/C catalysts with a shortened Ir-O(II-δ)- bond (1.91 Å) is the key active species for the enhancement of OER by balancing the adsorption free energy of oxygen-containing intermediates. This strategy thus opens an avenue for designing high performance 2D ordered mesoporous electrocatalysts through a nanoconfined self-assembly strategy for water oxidation and beyond.
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A considerable amount of platinum (Pt) is required to ensure an adequate rate for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in fuel cells and metal-air batteries. Thus, the implementation of atomic Pt catalysts holds promise for minimizing the Pt content. In this contribution, atomic Pt sites with nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) co-coordination on a carbon matrix (PtNPC) are conceptually predicted and experimentally developed to alter the d-band center of Pt, thereby promoting the intrinsic ORR activity. PtNPC with a record-low Pt content (≈0.026â wt %) consequently shows a benchmark-comparable activity for ORR with an onset of 1.0 VRHE and half-wave potential of 0.85 VRHE . It also features a high stability in 15 000-cycle tests and a superior turnover frequency of 6.80â s-1 at 0.9 VRHE . Damjanovic kinetics analysis reveals a tuned ORR kinetics of PtNPC from a mixed 2/4-electron to a predominately 4-electron route. It is discovered that coordinated P species significantly shifts d-band center of Pt atoms, accounting for the exceptional performance of PtNPC.
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MXenes, a novel family of 2D materials, are energy materials that have gained considerable attention, particularly for their catalytic applications in emerging areas such as CO2 and N2 hydrogenation. Herein, for the first time, it is shown that the surface reducibility of Ti3 C2 Tx MXene can be tuned by N doping, which induces a change in the catalytic properties of supported Co nanoparticles. Pristine Co-Ti3 C2 Tx MXene favors CO production during CO2 hydrogenation, whereas CH4 production is favored when the MXene is subjected to simple N doping. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) reveal that surface rutile TiO2 nanoparticles appear on the Ti3 C2 Tx support upon N doping, which interact strongly with the supported Co nanoparticles. This interaction alters the reducibility of the supported Co nanoparticles at the interface with the TiO2 nanoparticles, shifting the product selectivity from CO to CH4 . This study successfully showcases a practical strategy, based on surface chemistry modulation of 2D MXenes, for regulating product distribution in CO2 hydrogenation.
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Ni-promoted electrocatalytic biomass reforming has shown promising prospect in enabling high value-added product synthesis. Here, we developed a novel hybrid catalyst with Ni nanosheet forests anchored on carbon paper. The hybrid catalyst exhibits high efficiency in electrooxidation of HMF to FDCA coupling with H2 production in high purity. The Ni nanosheets have small crystal grain sizes with abundant edges, which is able to deliver an efficient HMF oxidation to FDCA (selectivity >99 %) at low potential of 1.36â VRHE with high stability. The post-reaction structure analysis reveals the Ni nanosheets would transfer electrons to carbon and readily turn into NiOx and Ni(OH)x during the reaction. DFT results suggest high valence Ni species would facilitate the chemical adsorption (activation) of HMF revealing the reaction pathway. This work emphasizes the importance of the precise control of Ni activity via atomic structure engineering.
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Hydrogen is increasingly viewed as a game-changer in the clean energy sector. Renewable hydrogen production from water is industrialized by integrating water electrolysis and renewable electricity, but the current cost of water-born hydrogen remains high though. An ideal scenario would be to produce value-added chemicals along with hydrogen so the cost can be partially offset. Herein, facilitated bio-hydrogen extraction and biomass-derived chemical formation from sugar-derived 5-hydroxymethyfurfural (HMF) were achieved via the in-situ transformation of cobalt-bound electrocatalysts. The cyanide-bound cobalt hydroxide exhibited a low voltage at 1.55â V at 10â mA cm-2 for bio-hydrogen production, compared with an iridium catalyst (1.75â V). The interaction between the biomass intermediate and the cyanide ligand is suggested to be responsible for the improved activity.
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Closing the material cycle for harmful and rare resources is a key criterion for sustainable and green energy systems. The concept of using scalable biomass-derived carbon electrodes to produce hydrogen from water was proposed here, satisfying the need for sustainability in the field of chemical energy conversion. The carbon electrodes exhibited not only water oxidation activity but also a strong self-oxidation when being used as anode for water splitting. The carbon oxidation, which is more energy-favorable, was intentionally allowed to occur for an improvement of the total current, thus enhancing the hydrogen production on the cathode side. By introducing different earth-abundant metals, the electrode could be well adjusted to achieve an optimized water/carbon oxidation ratio and an appreciable reactivity for practical applications. This promising methodology may become a very large driver for carbon chemistry when waste organic materials or biomass can be converted using its intrinsic energy content of carbon. Such a process could open a safe path for sub-zero CO2 emission control. The concept of how and which parameter of a carbon-based electrode can be optimized was presented and discussed in this paper.
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The recent mechanistic understanding of active sites, adsorbed intermediate products, and rate-determining steps (RDS) of nitrogenâ (N)-modified carbon catalysts in electrocatalytic oxygen reduction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) are still rife with controversy because of the inevitable coexistence of diverse N configurations and the technical limitations for the observation of formed intermediates. Herein, seven kinds of aromatic molecules with designated single N species are used as model structures to investigate the explicit role of each common N group in both ORR and OER. Specifically, dynamic evolution of active sites and key adsorbed intermediate products including O2 (ads), superoxide anion O2 - *, and OOH* are monitored with inâ situ spectroscopy. We propose that the formation of *OOH species from O2 - * (O2 - *+H2 OâOOH*+OH- ) is a possible RDS during the ORR process, whereas the generation of O2 from OOH* species is the most likely RDS during the OER process.
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Electrochemical nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR) over nonprecious-metal and single-atom catalysts has received increasing attention as a sustainable strategy to synthesize ammonia. However, the atomic-scale regulation of such active sites for NRR catalysis remains challenging because of the large distance between them, which significantly weakens their cooperation. Herein, the utilization of regular surface cavities with unique microenvironment on graphitic carbon nitride as "subnano reactors" to precisely confine multiple Fe and Cu atoms for NRR electrocatalysis is reported. The synergy of Fe and Cu atoms in such confined subnano space provides significantly enhanced NRR performance, with nearly doubles ammonia yield and 54%-increased Faradic efficiency up to 34%, comparing with the single-metal counterparts. First principle simulation reveals this synergistic effect originates from the unique Fe-Cu coordination, which effectively modifies the N2 absorption, improves electron transfer, and offers extra redox couples for NRR. This work thus provides new strategies of manipulating catalysts active centers at the sub-nanometer scale.
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The structural transformation of MOFs in a polysulfide electrode process is poorly understood. We report the electrochemical amorphization of Cu3(BTC)2 MOFs in polysulfide electrolyte. We unveil the dynamic single-site polysulfide immobilization at the interconvertible Cu2+/Cu+ cation centres upon polysulfide adsorption and desorption, along with the reversible distortion of the Cu-O square planar unit.
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Iron-nitrogen (Fe-N) co-doped carbon nanomaterials are promising catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) with outstanding catalytic activity at low cost. Here, we demonstrate a facile bottom-up strategy to fabricate Fe, N, B co-doped bamboo-like carbon nanotubes using ionic liquid as dopant source. We show that the synergistic effect of Fe, N, B in the mesoporous carbon structure can derive excellent ORR activity, for which the FeNB/C-800 catalyst delivers an onset potential of 0.97â¯V (vs. reversible hydrogen electrode, RHE), a half-wave potential of 0.81â¯V (vs. RHE) and a high limiting current density (5.59â¯mAâ¯cm-2), comparable to a commercial Pt/C. The catalyst also shows good methanol tolerance as compared to Pt/C catalyst. This work highlights a bottom-up strategy for creating ternary Fe, N, B sites on carbon nanotubes using boron-containing ionic liquid precursor.
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Controlling the formation of nanosized branched nanoparticles with high uniformity is one of the major challenges in synthesizing nanocatalysts with improved activity and stability. Using a cubic-core hexagonal-branch mechanism to form highly monodisperse branched nanoparticles, we vary the length of the nickel branches. Lengthening the nickel branches, with their high coverage of active facets, is shown to improve activity for electrocatalytic oxidation of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), as an example for biomass conversion.
Assuntos
Furaldeído/análogos & derivados , Nanopartículas Metálicas/química , Níquel/química , Biomassa , Catálise , Furaldeído/química , Oxirredução , Tamanho da Partícula , Propriedades de SuperfícieRESUMO
Two-electron electrochemical oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on non-metallic nanocarbon catalysts yielding hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has attracted considerable research attentions in the field of electrochemistry, catalysis and material science. Here, oxidized carbon black (OCB) with different amounts of surface oxygen functional groups were synthesized for ORR. OCB catalysts exhibited a significant activity improvement for the two-electron pathway comparing with non-oxidized ones. Identification and quantification of active sites for two-electron pathway of ORR process were further realized via linking the activity to structural compositions of OCB, and both carboxyl (-COOH) and carbonyl (-CO) groups were proved responsible for two-electron pathway ORR to produce H2O2. The intrinsic activity of -COOH (k-COOH = 1.34 × 10-7 mol-1) was found higher than that of -CO (k-CO = 0.25 × 10-7 mol-1). The present work provides new physical-chemical insights on the mechanism of oxygen reduction reactions on carbon-based catalysts, paving the way for the establishment of structure-function relations and further development of novel non-metallic catalytic systems.
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Development of cost-effective electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is key to enabling advanced electrochemical energy conversion technologies. Here, a novel nitrogen-doped metal-carbon hybrid (NiCo/CN) with a unique 3D hierarchical structure, consisting of uniformly distributed bimetallic nanoparticles encapsulated by partially graphitized N-doped carbon shells, is fabricated by a one-step pyrolysis of a nanoscale metal-organic framework as precursor, which exhibits excellent activity for both ORR and OER. The surface chemical changes on the carbon hybrid probed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) reveal the presence of favorable electronic interaction at the metal-nitrogen-carbon interface. Remarkably, the NiCo/CN catalyst prepared at high temperature (800°C) manifests a comparable performance to a commercial Pt/C catalyst for the ORR, but also superior stability, path selectivity and methanol tolerance. On the other hand, the E onset (1.48 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode) and E j = 10 mA/cm 2 of NiCo/CN-800 for OER is very close to the state-of-the-art noble catalyst RuO2 (Eonset = 1.46 and E j = 10 mA/cm 2 ) along with superior stability over 20 h of operation. The excellent catalytic property is attributable to the unique nanostructure, high porosity and the constructive synergistic effects of the elements M, N, and C.
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The large-scale application of electrochemical reduction of CO2, as a viable strategy to mitigate the effects of anthropogenic climate change, is hindered by the lack of active and cost-effective electrocatalysts that can be generated in bulk. To this end, SnO2 nanoparticles that are prepared using the industrially adopted flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) technique as active catalysts are reported for the conversion of CO2 to formate (HCOO-), exhibiting a FEHCOO - of 85% with a current density of -23.7 mA cm-2 at an applied potential of -1.1 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode. Through tuning of the flame synthesis conditions, the amount of oxygen hole center (OHC; Sn≡Oâ) is synthetically manipulated, which plays a vital role in CO2 activation and thereby governing the high activity displayed by the FSP-SnO2 catalysts for formate production. The controlled generation of defects through a simple, scalable fabrication technique presents an ideal approach for rationally designing active CO2 reduction reactions catalysts.
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Future renewable energy conversion requires advanced electrocatalysis technologies for hydrogen production, fuel cells, and metal-air batteries. Highly efficient trifunctional nonprecious electrocatalysts are a critical precious metal replacement for the economically viable electrocatalysis of oxygen reduction and water splitting, both of which are a triphase electrode process. Electrocatalysts with a refined porous structure and active composition beneficial for three-phase reactions are broadly pursued. Herein, a highly promising trifunctional spherical Murray assembly of Co-N-C nanoparticles was derived from low-cost Prussian blue analogues for the oxygen reduction reaction and water splitting. The Murray-type architecture with a tunable porous hierarchy for efficient mass transfer and the combination of a Co-N-C active composition are key for the improved electrocatalytic performance. Acid-leaching produced an optimized Murray-type durable and methanol-tolerant Co-N-C electrocatalyst that achieved an onset potential of 0.94 V [vs reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE)] and a half wave potential of 0.84 V (vs RHE) as well as a large diffusion-limited current density of 5.7 mA cm-2 for the oxygen reduction reaction, which is comparable to Pt/C. In addition, it displayed low onset overpotentials of â¼150 and â¼350 mV corresponding to the hydrogen evolution reaction and oxygen evolution reaction, respectively, highlighting its great potential to be used in overall water splitting with a total splitting voltage of 1.73 V. This work highlights the importance of Murray-type electrocatalysts for multiphase energy-related reactions.
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A non-persistent radical precursor, N-hydroxyphthalimide (NHPI), is reported as a low-cost, high-potential organic cathode in a binary electrolyte for a semi-aqueous redox battery. A highly reversible NHPI-phthalimide N-oxyl (PINO) radical redox couple at +1.30 VNHE is demonstrated, providing a 1.15 V rechargeable battery with an attractive >85% voltage efficiency when coupled with anthraquinone-2-sulfonic acid (AQS).
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The interface at the metal oxide-carbon hybrid heterojunction is the source to the well-known "synergistic effect" in catalysis. Understanding the structure-function properties is key for designing more advanced catalyst-support systems. Using a model MnIII-O x single-layer catalyst on carbon, we herein report a full elucidation to the catalytic synergism at the hybrid heterojunction in the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). The successful fabrication of the single-layer catalyst from bottom-up is fully characterized by the X-ray absorption fine structure and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. For oxygen electrocatalysis over this model hybrid heterostructure, our results, from both theory and experiment, show that the synergistic ORR truly undergoes a cooperated two-step electrocatalysis with catalytic promotion (Δ Eonset = 60 mV) near the heterojunction and over the single-layer catalyst through an interfacial electronic interplay, rather than an abstruse transition towards a one-step dissociative pathway. Finally, we report a superior peroxide-reducing activity of 432.5 mA cm-2 mg(M)-1 over the MnIII-O x single-layer.