A No-Sweat Strategy for Graphene-Macrocycle Co-assembled Electrocatalyst toward Oxygen Reduction and Ambient Ammonia Synthesis.
Ashmita BiswasSubhajit SarkarManisha DasNavpreet KambojRamendra Sundar DeyPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2020)
Toward the realm of sustainable energy, the development of efficient methods to enhance the performance of electrocatalysts with molecular level perception has gained immense attention. Inspite of untiring attempts, the production cost and scaling-up issues have been a step back toward the commercialization of the electrocatalysts. Herein, we report a one-pot electrophoretic exfoliation technique with minimum time and power input to synthesize iron phthalocyanine functionalized high-quality graphene sheets (G-FePc). The π-stacked co-assembly excels in oxygen reduction performance (major criterion for fuel cells) with a high positive E1/2 of 0.91 V (vs RHE) and a reproducible reduction peak potential of 0.90 V (vs RHE). An overpotential as low as 29 mV dec-1 and complete tolerance toward the methanol crossover effect confirm the authentication of the catalytic performance of our designed catalyst G-FePc. The catalyst simultaneously exhibits hydrogen storage efficacy by means of nitrogen fixation, yielding 27.74 μg h-1 mgcat-1 NH3 at a potential of -0.3 V (vs RHE) in an acidic electrolyte. The structure-function relationship of the catalyst is revealed via molecular orbital chemistry for the bonding of the Fe(II) active center with O2 and N2 during catalysis.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- visible light
- metal organic framework
- induced apoptosis
- carbon dioxide
- air pollution
- photodynamic therapy
- reduced graphene oxide
- minimally invasive
- cell cycle arrest
- particulate matter
- human health
- randomized controlled trial
- single cell
- quantum dots
- risk assessment
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- clinical trial
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- study protocol
- pi k akt
- mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress
- amino acid