Ultrathin Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Encapsulated Ni Nanoparticles for Highly Efficient Electrochemical CO 2 Reduction and Aqueous Zn-CO 2 Batteries.
Fangyuan WangGuan WangPeilin DengYao ChenJing LiDaoxiong WuZhitong WangChongtai WangYingjie HuaXin Long TianPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Electrochemical CO 2 reduction reaction (CO 2 RR), powered by renewable electricity, has attracted great attention for producing high value-added fuels and chemicals, as well as feasibly mitigating CO 2 emission problem. Here, this work reports a facile hard template strategy to prepare the Ni@N-C catalyst with core-shell structure, where nickel nanoparticles (Ni NPs) are encapsulated by thin nitrogen-doped carbon shells (N-C shells). The Ni@N-C catalyst has demonstrated a promising industrial current density of 236.7 mA cm -2 with the superb FE CO of 97% at -1.1 V versus RHE. Moreover, Ni@N-C can drive the reversible Zn-CO 2 battery with the largest power density of 1.64 mW cm -2 , and endure a tough cycling durability. These excellent performances are ascribed to the synergistic effect of Ni@N-C that Ni NPs can regulate the electronic microenvironment of N-doped carbon shells, which favor to enhance the CO 2 adsorption capacity and the electron transfer capacity. Density functional theory calculations prove that the binding configuration of N-C located on the top of Ni slabs (Top-Ni@N-C) is the most thermodynamically stable and possess a lowest thermodynamic barrier for the formation of COOH * and the desorption of CO. This work may pioneer a new method on seeking high-efficiency and worthwhile electrocatalysts for CO 2 RR and Zn-CO 2 battery.