| Literature DB >> 23877200 |
In-Yup Jeon1, Hyun-Jung Choi, Myung Jong Ju, In Taek Choi, Kimin Lim, Jaejung Ko, Hwan Kyu Kim, Jae Cheon Kim, Jae-Joon Lee, Dongbin Shin, Sun-Min Jung, Jeong-Min Seo, Min-Jung Kim, Noejung Park, Liming Dai, Jong-Beom Baek.
Abstract
Nitrogen fixation is essential for the synthesis of many important chemicals (e.g., fertilizers, explosives) and basic building blocks for all forms of life (e.g., nucleotides for DNA and RNA, amino acids for proteins). However, direct nitrogen fixation is challenging as nitrogen (N₂) does not easily react with other chemicals. By dry ball-milling graphite with N₂, we have discovered a simple, but versatile, scalable and eco-friendly, approach to direct fixation of N₂ at the edges of graphene nanoplatelets (GnPs). The mechanochemical cracking of graphitic C--C bonds generated active carbon species that react directly with N₂ to form five- and six-membered aromatic rings at the broken edges, leading to solution-processable edge-nitrogenated graphene nanoplatelets (NGnPs) with superb catalytic performance in both dye-sensitized solar cells and fuel cells to replace conventional Pt-based catalysts for energy conversion.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23877200 PMCID: PMC3719072 DOI: 10.1038/srep02260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) A schematic representation of physical cracking of graphite flake in a ball-mill crusher (500 mL) containing stainless steel balls (500.0 g, diameter 5 mm) agitated at 500 rpm for 48 h in the presence of nitrogen and subsequent exposure to air moisture to produce NGnPs. SEM images: (b) starting graphite flake; (c) NGnPs after ball-milling. Scale bars are 1 μm. The ring formation mechanisms depending upon the cracking patterns of unzipped edges: (d) the formation of 5-membered pyrazole ring after the reaction between the active zigzag-edge carbon atoms and nitrogen; (e) the formation 6-membered pyridazine ring after the reaction between the active armchair-edge carbon atoms and nitrogen.
Figure 2(a) XPS survey spectra of the pristine graphite and the as-prepared NGnPs. High-resolution XPS spectra of NGnPs: (b) C 1s; (c) O 1s; (d) N 1s.
Figure 3The NGnP with edge 5-membered pyrazole rings.
(a) the model structure; (b) the PDOS for N atoms. The NGnP with edge 6-membered pyridazine rings: (c) the model structure; (d) the PDOS for N atoms. The isosurfaces of the squared Kohn-Sham orbitals of edge-localized states are shown in the insets.
Figure 4(a) Equivalent circuit diagram for fitting the EIS data. (b) Nyquist plots of EIS spectra measured at 0 V from 106 Hz to 0.1 Hz on dummy cells of Pt and NGnP, and solid lines are fitted curves. (c) Current-voltage characteristics of DSSCs with the Pt-FTO and NGnP-FTO CEs under simulated AM 1.5 light. The TiO2 film thickness and active area are 9(6 + 3) μm and 0.16 cm2 with a black metal mask, respectively. Cyclic voltammograms (CV) of samples on glassy carbon (GC) electrodes with a scan rate of 0.01 V/s: (d) in N2-saturated 0.1 M aq. KOH solution; (e) in O2-saturated 0.1 M aq. KOH solution. Sky blue arrows indicate the contributions of hydrogen evolution at around −0.7 V and out of Pt limiting potential (−0.8 V).