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1.
Acc Chem Res ; 2024 Feb 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38319799

RESUMEN

ConspectusOxygen electrode catalysis is crucial for the efficient operation of clean energy devices, such as proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) and Zn-air batteries (ZABs). However, sluggish oxygen electrocatalysis kinetics in these infrastructures put forward impending requirements toward seeking efficient oxygen-electrode catalytic materials with a clear active-site configuration and geometrical morphology to study in depth the structure-property relationship of materials. Although transition-metal-nitrogen-carbon (M-N-C) electrocatalysts have shown great prospects currently and potential in oxygen electrocatalysis as promising platinum group metal-free catalysts, the universal pyrolysis operation in the preparation process often inevitably brings about randomness and diversity of active sites, for which it is difficult to determine the structure-activity relationship, understand the catalytic mechanism, and further improve facilities performance.Covalent organic polymers (COPs) are a class of molecular geometric constructs linked by irreversible kinetic covalent bonds through reticular chemistry. Unique structural tailorability, diverse design principles, and inherent well-defined construction in pristine COPs naturally provide a great platform to study the structure-property relationship of active sites and exhibit unique features for application. In this Account, we afford an overview of our recent attempts toward the utilization of COP materials as free-pyrolysis oxygen electrode catalysts, enabling accurate construction of oxygen electrodes with clear active site and geometrical morphology characteristics in PEMFC and ZAB devices yet without enduring any high-temperature pyrolysis treatments. Starting from the needs of modern electrocatalysis, we discussed the unique properties for the design and development of pyrolysis-free pristine COPs as high-performance oxygen electrode catalytic materials in terms of intrinsic electronic structure properties and membrane-electrode-assembly (MEA) application distinguished from pyrolysis M-N-C catalysts. First, the pyrolysis-free COP catalysts provide a viable molecular model catalyst platform, which is conducive to mechanism comprehension for the relationship between catalyst activity and structure. Second, the simple and low-energy consumption synthesis process for pyrolysis-free catalysts lays the foundation for the large-scale production of catalysts, oxygen electrodes, and even the entire stack assembly without considering numerous complicated factors as traditional pyrolytic catalysts. Besides, most traditional COPs are difficult to dissolve and solution process due to their cross-linked skeleton. Our newly developed COP materials with solution processability bring about new opportunities to the process and assemble oxygen electrodes into device. These properties are unparalleled and have not been systematically reviewed and analyzed by any research reports so far. Here, we have clarified the specific advantage and potential of pyrolysis-free COP materials as oxygen electrodes applied in PEMFC and ZAB devices in response to the latest progress and requirements of current electrocatalytic research.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(16): e202215441, 2023 Apr 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36625776

RESUMEN

The structural diversity of active sites resulting from traditional pyrolysis hinder our understanding of the local coordination environment (LCE) around the active site, and its effects on performance in the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). We created a series of FeN4 active-site configurations via a pyrolysis-free approach where LCEs are defined by covalent organic polymers (COPs). Our results suggest a more positive charge on iron atoms in the vicinity of an electron-withdrawing side-chain; that is, a high-valence configuration (FeH+ N4 ) that is achieved with a COPBTC @Cl-CNTs catalyst subject to d z 2 ${{d}_{{z}^{2}}}$ -orbital tuning. A new descriptor ξ, defined as the band center of iron atoms projected on the 3 d z 2 ${{3d}_{{z}^{2}}}$ -orbital, was introduced to quantitively explain a volcano-like regulation mechanism. When ξ is distributed between -1.887 and -1.862 eV, the catalytic performance of the COPBTC @Cl-CNTs electrocatalyst is optimized.

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