2021 Annual Meeting
(190g) Correlating Atomic-Scale Compositions and Structures of Mesoporous N-Containing Carbon Electrocatalysts with Oxygen and Sulfur Reduction Properties
Authors
While inclusion of N-heteroatoms improves carbon-based electrocatalyst reduction activity, the atomic-level origins of such properties have remained elusive. Two-dimensional 13C-15N NMR spectra resolve signals from four distinct types of N-heteroatom environments: pyrrolic, graphitic, edge/isolated pyridinic, and pyrazinic/pyridinic moieties, the quantities of which vary by porogen and account for different reduction activities. Chemical shift assignments are corroborated by DFT. Importantly, 15N-1H NMR spectra enable surface N species to be selectively distinguished from interior moieties via interactions with adsorbed water. These analyses establish that certain types of N-carbon moieties are more important to electrocatalytic performance than others. The incorporation of non-precious transition metals (e.g., Fe) significantly increases electrocatalytic activity, which have been challenging to explain. Nevertheless, 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy and solid-state 15N NMR and spin-lattice relaxation-time analysesresolve signals from 15N species that are proximate to paramagnetic Fe-heteroatoms, from which 15N-Fe distances are estimated. Understanding the roles of Fe and N-carbon moieties in electrocatalytic reduction yields new design criteria for syntheses of high performance non-precious-metal electrocatalysts with diverse fuel cell and battery applications.