2 research outputs found
Sub‑3 nm CoO Nanoparticles with Oxygen Vacancy-Dependent Catalytic Activity for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction
Developing
transition metal-based electrocatalysts toward the oxygen
reduction reaction (ORR) with high activity has attracted much attention
for high-powered electrochemical energy conversion devices. Earth-abundant
and low-cost cobalt oxide has attracted ever-growing interest; however,
insufficient active sites and poor electrical conductivity hamper
the improvement of catalytic activity for the ORR. Herein, the high-dispersed
ultra-small CoO nanoparticles on three-dimensional porous carbon are
synthesized by a facile wet chemistry and low-temperature calcination
strategy. The characterization with multiple techniques shows that
the oxygen vacancy defects are in situ formed on sub-3 nm CoO, and
oxygen vacancy concentrations can be adjusted to investigate the related
ORR performance. The computational and experimental results demonstrate
that moderate oxygen vacancy concentration in CoO improves electrical
conductivity, reduces the energy barrier in the rate-limiting step,
and optimizes the adsorption of *O and *OH intermediates, thus achieving
a high half-wave potential of 0.80 V and a limiting current density
of 5.26 mA cm–2. This work points out an avenue
to the future design of high-efficiency metal oxides for diverse renewable
energy applications
Visualization 1: Dynamic phase measurement based on spatial carrier-frequency phase-shifting method
The phase variation of a droplet evaporation process Originally published in Optics Express on 27 June 2016 (oe-24-13-13744