Graphitic Armor: A Natural Molecular Sieve for Robust Hydrogen Electroxidation.
Hai-Wen ChenDe-Quan CaoShi-Jun XieJia-Jun DaiZhi-Hai DaiChun-Hua ZhenJian-Feng LiBeate PaulusZu-Wei YinJun-Tao LiYao ZhouShi-Gang SunPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Carbon coating layers have been found to improve the catalytic performance of transition metals, which is usually explained as an outcome of electronic synergistic effect. Herein we reveal that the defective graphitic carbon, with a unique interlayer gap of 0.342 nm, can be a highly selective natural molecular sieve. It allows efficient diffusion of hydrogen molecules or radicals both along the in-plane and out-of-plane direction, but sterically hinders the diffusion of molecules with larger kinetic diameter (e.g., CO and O 2 ) along the in-plane direction. As a result, poisonous species lager than 0.342 nm are sieved out, even when their adsorption on the metal is thermodynamically strong; at the same time, the interaction between H 2 and the metal is not affected. This natural molecular sieve provides a very chance for constructing robust metal catalysts for hydrogen-relevant processes, which are more tolerant to chemical or electrochemical oxidation or CO-relevant poisoning.