3 research outputs found
Highly Graphitic Mesoporous Fe,N-Doped Carbon Materials for Oxygen Reduction Electrochemical Catalysts
The synthesis, characterization,
and electrocatalytic properties of mesoporous carbon materials doped
with nitrogen atoms and iron are reported and compared for the catalyzed
reduction of oxygen gas at fuel cell cathodes. Mixtures of common
and inexpensive organic precursors, melamine, and formaldehyde were
pyrolyzed in the presence of transition-metal salts (e.g., nitrates)
within a mesoporous silica template to yield mesoporous carbon materials
with greater extents of graphitization than those of others prepared
from small-molecule precursors. In particular, Fe,N-doped carbon materials
possessed high surface areas (∼800 m<sup>2</sup>/g) and high
electrical conductivities (∼19 S/cm), which make them attractive
for electrocatalyst applications. The surface compositions of the
mesoporous Fe,N-doped carbon materials were postsynthetically modified
by acid washing and followed by high-temperature thermal treatments,
which were shown by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to favor the
formation of graphitic and pyridinic nitrogen moieties. Such surface-modified
materials exhibited high electrocatalytic oxygen reduction activities
under alkaline conditions, as established by their high onset and
half-wave potentials (1.04 and 0.87 V, respectively vs reversible
hydrogen electrode) and low Tafel slope (53 mV/decade). These values
are superior to many similar transition-metal- and N-doped carbon
materials and compare favorably with commercially available precious-metal
catalysts, e.g., 20 wt % Pt supported on activated carbon. The analyses
indicate that inexpensive mesoporous Fe,N-doped carbon materials are
promising alternatives to precious metal-containing catalysts for
electrochemical reduction of oxygen in polymer electrolyte fuel cells