Molecular Bridging Enables Isolated Iron Atoms on Stereoassembled Carbon Framework To Boost Oxygen Reduction for Zinc-Air Batteries.
Wenqing WangKun RuiKaili WuYisha WangLongwei KeXin WangFeng XuYan LuJixin ZhuPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Realizing the synergy between active site regulation and rational structural engineering is essential in the electrocatalysis community but still challenging. Here, a matrix-confined co-pyrolysis strategy based on molecular bridging is demonstrated to realize highly dispersed Fe atoms on stereoassembled carbon framework. Both polyacrylonitrile matrix and organic linker from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide sufficient N-anchoring sites for the generation of Fe-N 4 moieties. A high Fe loading of 2.9 wt.% is readily achieved based on the scalable approach without post-treatment. Owing to the presence of highly exposed Fe-N-C sites and well-tuned pore structures, isolated Fe atoms on porous carbon nanofiber framework (Fe-SA/NCF) exhibits decent oxygen reduction activity and stability in alkaline conditions via a near four-electron path, demonstrating superior performance as air cathode for zinc-air batteries (ZABs) to commercial Pt/C catalyst.