Publication | Closed Access
Fe‐N‐C Oxygen Reduction Fuel Cell Catalyst Derived from Carbendazim: Synthesis, Structure, and Reactivity
391
Citations
37
References
2014
Year
Materials ScienceIron NitrateChemical EngineeringCatalytic MaterialEngineeringOxygen Reduction ReactionCatalytic ApplicationCatalytic SynthesisCatalysisChemistryNew Non‐pgm CatalystsCatalyst PreparationHybrid MaterialsElectrochemistry
New non‐PGM catalysts from the family of Fe‐N‐C pyrolyzed materials are reported. They are synthesized using a templating silica powder with iron nitrate and carbendazim (CBDZ) precursors (sacrificial support method). The synthesis involves high temperature pyrolysis, followed by etching of the sacrificial support (silica) and obtaining a “self‐supported” open frame morphology catalyst. Both the temperature of heat treatment and Fe to CBDZ ratio play a crucial role in the final catalytic activity in oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Prepared materials have extremely high durability in RDE tests, ending up with more than 94% of initial activity (by E 1/2 value) after 10 000 cycles in an oxygen atmosphere, which is the result we report for the first time. Evaluation of these new M‐N‐C catalysts in a single membrane electrode assembly (MEA) has shown an exceptionally high open circuit voltage (OCV) of 1 V and the world's second best performance with no IR correction. MEA tests have shown high current density of 700 mA cm ‐2 at 0.6 V and 120 mA cm ‐2 at 0.8 V. In‐depth structure‐to‐property correlation presents an evidence that Fe‐N x centers are the active sites playing a key role in oxygen reduction reaction.
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