RESUMO
Transition metal single-atom catalysts (SACs) in uniform carbon nanospheres have gained tremendous interest as electrocatalysts owing to their low cost, high activity, and excellent selectivity. However, their preparation typically involves complicated multistep processes that are not practical for industrial use. Herein, we report a facile one-pot method to produce atomically isolated metal atoms with high loadings in uniform carbon nanospheres without any templates or postsynthesis modifications. Specifically, we use a chemical confinement strategy to suppress the formation of metal nanoparticles by introducing ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) as a molecular barrier to spatially isolate the metal atoms and thus generate SACs. To demonstrate the versatility of this synthetic method, we produced SACs from multiple transition metals, including Fe, Co, Cu, and Ni, with loadings as high as 3.87 wt %. Among these catalytic materials, the Fe-based SACs showed remarkable catalytic activity toward the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), achieving an onset and half-wave potential of 1.00 and 0.831 VRHE, respectively, comparable to that of commercial 20 wt % Pt/C. Significantly, we were able to steer the ORR selectivity toward either energy generation or hydrogen peroxide production by simply changing the transition metal in the EDTA-based precursor.
RESUMO
We report a robust method for the facile synthesis of N-doped carbon nanospheres with uniform and tunable sizes. Instead of involving a surfactant or other templates, this synthesis relies on the incorporation of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) into the emulsion droplets of phenolic resin oligomers. The EDTA provides a high density of surface charges to effectively increase the electrostatic repulsion between the droplets and thereby prevent them from coalescing into irregular structures during polymerization-induced hardening. The EDTA-loaded polymer nanospheres are highly uniform in terms of both size and shape for easy crystallization into opaline structures. While maintaining good uniformity, the diameters of the resultant N-doped carbon nanospheres can be readily tuned from 100 to 375 nm, allowing for the fabrication of opaline lattices with brilliant structural colors. The EDTA also serves as an additional nitrogen source to promote the formation of graphitic-N, making the N-doped carbon nanospheres highly active, metal-free bifunctional electrocatalysts toward oxygen reduction and oxygen evolution reactions.