Nitrogen‐Coordinated Single Cobalt Atom Catalysts for Oxygen Reduction in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells

Xiao Xia Wang(East China University of Science and Technology), David A. Cullen(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Yung‐Tin Pan(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Sooyeon Hwang(Brookhaven National Laboratory), Maoyu Wang(Oregon State University), Zhenxing Feng(Oregon State University), Jingyun Wang(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Mark Engelhard(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Hanguang Zhang(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Yanghua He(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Yuyan Shao(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Dong Su(Brookhaven National Laboratory), Karren L. More(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Jacob S. Spendelow(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Gang Wu(University at Buffalo, State University of New York)
Advanced Materials
January 24, 2018
Cited by 1,082Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Due to the Fenton reaction, the presence of Fe and peroxide in electrodes generates free radicals causing serious degradation of the organic ionomer and the membrane. Pt‐free and Fe‐free cathode catalysts therefore are urgently needed for durable and inexpensive proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). Herein, a high‐performance nitrogen‐coordinated single Co atom catalyst is derived from Co‐doped metal‐organic frameworks (MOFs) through a one‐step thermal activation. Aberration‐corrected electron microscopy combined with X‐ray absorption spectroscopy virtually verifies the CoN 4 coordination at an atomic level in the catalysts. Through investigating effects of Co doping contents and thermal activation temperature, an atomically Co site dispersed catalyst with optimal chemical and structural properties has achieved respectable activity and stability for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in challenging acidic media (e.g., half‐wave potential of 0.80 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). The performance is comparable to Fe‐based catalysts and 60 mV lower than Pt/C ‐60 μg Pt cm −2 ). Fuel cell tests confirm that catalyst activity and stability can translate to high‐performance cathodes in PEMFCs. The remarkably enhanced ORR performance is attributed to the presence of well‐dispersed CoN 4 active sites embedded in 3D porous MOF‐derived carbon particles, omitting any inactive Co aggregates.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis