Shear Field-Controlled Synthesis of Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Nanochains Forest with High-Density sp3 Defects for Efficient CO2 Electroreduction Reaction.
ACS Nano
; 18(22): 14595-14604, 2024 Jun 04.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38758185
ABSTRACT
Defect engineering and nitrogen doping being effective strategies for modulating the surface chemical state of the carbon matrix have been widely explored to promote the catalytic activity in the territory of electrochemical energy storage and conversion devices. However, the controllable synthesis of carbon material with high-density specific defects and high nitrogen doping is still full of challenges. Here, we first synthesize one-dimensional necklace-like nitrogen-doped carbon nanochains (N-CNCs) with abundant defects on carbon fiber paper (CFP) by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method. The resultant nanostructures are a bunch of interconnected carbon spheres with a hollow structure at the internode and present the complete one-dimensional nanochain configuration. Specifically, the N-CNCs with a corrugated surface possesses high content of sp3 defects (31.2%) and nitrogen (23.6 at %). Combining finite element analysis and experimental results, it reveals that the robust shear field generated by etching gas releasing from thermal decomposition of melamine in situ modulates the CVD process via changing the size and force environment of the metal catalyst droplets for formation of N-CNCs. Benefiting from the high ratio of sp3/sp2 and nitrogen doped on the surface, the N-CNCs@CFP displays a superior electrocatalytic performance for CO2RR, delivering CO Faradaic efficiency of 95.9% and a current density of 23.2 mA cm-2 at -0.86 V vs RHE. This work provides promising synthesis strategy and some inspirations for construction of ultradense and specific defects coupling with nitrogen doping sites into carbon materials to achieve high-efficiency electrocatalysis applications.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
ACS Nano
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Country of publication: