Bypassing Formation of Oxide Intermediate via Chemical Vapor Deposition for the Synthesis of an Mn-N-C Catalyst with Improved ORR Activity.
Thomas StracenskyLi JiaoQiang SunErshuai LiuFan YangSichen ZhongDavid A CullenDeborah J MyersArthur Jeremy KropfQingying JiaSanjeev MukerjeeHui XuPublished in: ACS catalysis (2023)
A significant barrier to the commercialization of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) is the high cost of the platinum-based oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) cathode electrocatalysts. One viable solution is to replace platinum with a platinum-group metal (PGM) free catalyst with comparable activity and durability. However, PGM-free catalyst development is burdened by a lack of understanding of the active site formation mechanism during the requisite high-temperature synthesis step, thus making rational catalyst design challenging. Herein we demonstrate in-temperature X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) to unravel the mechanism of site evolution during pyrolysis for a manganese-based catalyst. We show the transformation from an initial state of manganese oxides (MnO x ) at room temperature, to the emergence of manganese-nitrogen (MnN 4 ) site beginning at 750 °C, with its continued evolution up to the maximum temperature of 1000 °C. The competition between the MnO x and MnN 4 is identified as the primary factor governing the formation of MnN 4 sites during pyrolysis. This knowledge led us to use a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method to produce MnN 4 sites to bypass the evolution route involving the MnO x intermediates. The Mn-N-C catalyst synthesized via CVD shows improved ORR activity over the Mn-N-C synthesized via traditional synthesis by the pyrolysis of a mixture of Mn, N, and C precursors.