Abstract

Atomically dispersed transition metal active sites have emerged as one of the most important fields of study because they display promising performance in catalysis and have the potential to serve as ideal models for fundamental understanding. However, both the preparation and determination of such active sites remain a challenge. The structural engineering of carbon- and nitrogen-coordinated metal sites (M-N-C, M = Fe, Co, Ni, Mn, Cu, etc.) via employing new heteroatoms, e.g., P and S, remains challenging. In this study, carbon nanosheets embedded with nitrogen and phosphorus dual-coordinated iron active sites (denoted as Fe-N/P-C) were developed and determined using cutting edge techniques. Both experimental and theoretical results suggested that the N and P dual-coordinated iron sites were favorable for oxygen intermediate adsorption/desorption, resulting in accelerated reaction kinetics and promising catalytic oxygen reduction activity. This work not only provides efficient way to prepare well-defined single-atom active sites to boost catalytic performance but also paves the way to identify the dual-coordinated single metal atom sites.

Keywords

ChemistryCatalysisActive siteHeteroatomNitrogenOxygenTransition metalCarbon fibersPhosphorusMetalDesorptionInorganic chemistryAdsorptionPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryMaterials scienceRing (chemistry)

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
142
Issue
5
Pages
2404-2412
Citations
974
Access
Closed

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Kai Yuan, Dirk Lützenkirchen‐Hecht, Longbin Li et al. (2020). Boosting Oxygen Reduction of Single Iron Active Sites via Geometric and Electronic Engineering: Nitrogen and Phosphorus Dual Coordination. Journal of the American Chemical Society , 142 (5) , 2404-2412. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b11852

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/jacs.9b11852