Regulating the frontier orbital of iron phthalocyanine with nitrogen doped carbon nanosheets for improving oxygen reduction activity.
Xilin ZhangRui ZhengQingfang ChangZhongjun MaZongxian YangPublished in: Nanoscale (2024)
Iron phthalocyanine (FePc) has attracted widespread attention for its tunable electronic structure. However, the Fe-N sites suffer from undesirable oxygen reduction activity due to the symmetric geometries. A suitable substrate was thus needed to induce electron redistribution around Fe-N to improve the activity. Herein, ultrathin nitrogen-doped carbon nanosheets (N-CNSs) were prepared by a simple high temperature pyrolysis. Then iron phthalocyanine was loaded on the ultrathin nitrogen-doped carbon nanosheets (FePc@N-CNSs) by a low-cost and simple solution method. This composite catalyst shows an excellent ORR activity with a half potential of 0.88 V, an onset potential of 0.99 V and durability superior to commercial Pt/C. When used as an air cathode catalyst for rechargeable zinc-air batteries, FePc@N-CNS modified batteries outperform Pt/C + RuO 2 modified batteries with higher power density and superior constant current charge-discharge cycling stability of 37 hours. The regulated electronic structure of FePc by the N-CNS substrate was revealed further by DFT calculations, which explained the enhanced adsorption of the active center to the intermediates and the increased ORR performance.
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