Publication | Closed Access
Engineering of the Heterointerface of Porous Carbon Nanofiber–Supported Nickel and Manganese Oxide Nanoparticle for Highly Efficient Bifunctional Oxygen Catalysis
128
Citations
50
References
2020
Year
EngineeringPorous Cnf SupportNanoheterogeneous CatalysisChemistryChemical EngineeringNi|mno/cnf CatalystManganese Oxide NanoparticleMaterials ScienceCatalytic ApplicationBattery Electrode MaterialsAdvanced Electrode MaterialEnergy StorageCatalysisCatalytic ProcessElectrochemistryOxygen Reduction ReactionPorous CarbonElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesMetal Compounds
Abstract Constructing heterointerfaces between metals and metal compounds is an attractive strategy for the fabrication of high performance electrocatalysts. However, realizing the high degree of fusion of two different metal components to form heterointerfaces remains a great challenge, since the different metal components tend to grow separately in most cases. Herein, by employing carboxyl‐modified carbon nanotubes to stabilize different metal ions, the engineering of abundant Ni|MnO heterointerfaces is achieved in porous carbon nanofibers (Ni|MnO/CNF) during the electrospinning–calcination process. Remarkably, the resulting Ni|MnO/CNF catalyst exhibits activities that are among the best reported for the catalysis of both the oxygen reduction and oxygen evolution reactions. Moreover, the catalyst also demonstrates high power density and long cycle life in Zn–air batteries. Its superior electrochemical properties are mainly ascribed to the synergy between the engineering of oxygen‐deficient Ni|MnO heterointerfaces with a strong Ni/Mn alloying interaction and the 1D porous CNF support. This facile anchoring strategy for the initiation of bimetallic heterointerfaces creates appealing opportunities for the potential use of heteronanomaterials in practical sustainable energy applications.
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