Journal Home > Volume 15 , Issue 4

Designing highly efficient bifunctional electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction and evolution reaction (ORR/OER) is extremely important for developing regenerative fuel cells and metal-air batteries. Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have gained considerable attention in recent years because of their maximum atom utilization efficiency and tunable coordination environments. Herein, through density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we systematically explored the ORR/OER performances of nitrogen-coordinated transition metal carbon materials (TM-Nx-C (TM = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Pd, and Pt; x = 3, 4)) through tailoring the coordination environment. Our results demonstrate that compared to conventional tetra-coordinated (TM-N4-C) catalysts, the asymmetric tri-coordinated (TM-N3-C) catalysts exhibit stronger adsorption capacity of catalytic intermediates. Among them, Ni-N3-C possesses optimal adsorption energy and the lowest overpotential of 0.29 and 0.28 V for ORR and OER, respectively, making it a highly efficient bifunctional catalyst for oxygen catalysis. Furthermore, we find this enhanced effect stems from the additional orbital interaction between newly uncoordinated d-orbitals and p-orbitals of oxygenated species, which is evidently testified via the change of d-band center and integral crystal orbital Hamilton population (ICOHP). This work not only provides a potential bifunctional oxygen catalyst, but also enriches the knowledge of coordination engineering for tailoring the activity of SACs, which may pave the way to design and discover more promising bifunctional electrocatalysts for oxygen catalysis.

File
12274_2021_3964_MOESM1_ESM.pdf (4.3 MB)
Publication history
Copyright
Acknowledgements

Publication history

Received: 11 August 2021
Revised: 06 October 2021
Accepted: 27 October 2021
Published: 17 December 2021
Issue date: April 2022

Copyright

© Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2021

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

We thank the following funding agencies for supporting this work: Foshan Xianhu Laboratory of the Advanced Energy Science and Technology Guangdong Laboratory (No. XHT2020-003), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (No. 2021M692490), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No. WUT:2020Ⅲ029, 2020IVA100).

Return