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Biomass-Derived N-Doped Carbon for Efficient Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction to CO and Zn-CO2 Batteries.

Xiaoqiong HaoXiaowei AnAmar M PatilPeifen WangXuli MaXiao DuXiaogang HaoAbuliti AbudulaGuoqing Guan
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Conversion of CO2 into valuable chemicals via electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) is a promising technology to alleviate the energy crisis and the greenhouse effect. Herein, low-cost wood biomass was applied as the carbon source to prepare nitrogen (N)-doped carbon electrocatalysts for the conversion of CO2 to CO and further as the cathode material for Zn-CO2 batteries. By virtue of N-doping and assistance of FeCl3, a cedar biomass-derived three-dimensional (3D) N-doped graphitized carbon with a high N-doping content (5.38%), an ultrahigh specific surface area (1673.6 m2 g-1), rich nanopores, and sufficient active N sites was successfully obtained, which exhibited super CO2RR activity with a high faradaic efficiency of 91% at a low applied potential of 0.56 V (vs RHE) and a long-term stability for at least 20 h. Furthermore, a Zn-CO2 battery with it as the cathode material delivered a stable open circuit voltage of 0.79 V, a peak power density of 0.51 mW cm-2 at 2.14 mA cm-2, and a maximum faradaic efficiency to CO of 80.4% at 2.56 mA cm-2, indicating that it could be applied in a practical process by using CO2 to generate power with the production of CO. Density functional theory calculations revealed that pyridinic N could more effectively decrease the free energy barriers for CO2RR and boost the reaction. This work not only revealed a facile approach to convert waste biomass into N-doped-graphitization carbon as valuable CO2RR electrocatalysts but also provided a new strategy to achieve "carbon solving carbon's problem".
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