Publication | Closed Access
The Kirkendall Effect for Engineering Oxygen Vacancy of Hollow Co<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> Nanoparticles toward High‐Performance Portable Zinc–Air Batteries
282
Citations
28
References
2019
Year
EngineeringNanoheterogeneous CatalysisEngineering Oxygen VacancyChemistryOxygen VacancyChemical EngineeringMaterials ScienceKirkendall EffectBattery Electrode MaterialsAdvanced Electrode MaterialEnergy StorageCatalysisO 4Solid-state BatteryElectrochemistryOxygen Reduction ReactionPorous CarbonLi-ion Battery MaterialsElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesEmbedded Cobalt Nanoparticles
Abstract Structure and defect control are widely accepted effective strategies to manipulate the activity and stability of catalysts. On a freestanding hierarchically porous carbon microstructure, the tuning of oxygen vacancy in the embedded hollow cobaltosic oxide (Co 3 O 4 ) nanoparticles is demonstrated through the regulation of nanoscale Kirkendall effect. Starting with the embedded cobalt nanoparticles, the concentration of oxygen‐vacancy defect can vary with the degree of Kirkendall oxidation, thus regulating the number of active sites and the catalytic performances. The optimized freestanding catalyst shows among the smallest reversible oxygen overpotential of 0.74 V for catalyzing oxygen reduction/evolution reactions in 0.1 m KOH. Moreover, the catalyst shows promise for substitution of noble metals to boost cathodic oxygen reactions in portable zinc–air batteries. This work provides a strategy to explore catalysts with controllable vacancy defects and desired nano‐/microstructures.
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