With the goal of improving the activity
of single-atom catalysts,
in-depth investigations were performed to design adjacent single-metal
sites to produce a modulation effect by using symmetry breaking as
an indicator of tuning the electronic structure. A CoN4-ZnN4/C catalyst composed of adjacent Co and Zn sites
anchored on nitrogen-doped graphene was predicted by first-principle
calculations to exhibit promising bifunctional electrocatalytic activity
for oxygen reduction and evolution reactions with an overpotential
of 0.225 and 0.264 V, respectively, which is superior to CoN4/C catalysts and outperforms commercial Pt/C and IrO2 benchmarks.
The impressive catalytic activity originates from the remarkable asymmetric
deformation and strong pseudo-Jahn–Teller vibronic coupling
effect, through which the Zn site acts as a modulator to induce the
symmetry-breaking phenomenon and tune the d-band structure and binding
strength between key intermediates and the Co site. It provides mechanism-based
insight for applying diatomic site catalysts for catalytic reactions
and further understanding of the modulation effect