| Literature DB >> 35528647 |
Ahmed K Yousef1, Yena Kim2,3, Piyali Bhanja3, Peng Mei3,4, Malay Pramanik3, M M S Sanad5, M M Rashad5, A Y El-Sayed1, Abdulmohsen Ali Alshehri6, Yousef Gamaan Alghamdi6, Khalid Ahmed Alzahrani6, Yusuke Ide3, Jianjian Lin2, Yusuke Yamauchi7,8.
Abstract
Inspired by their distinctive properties, transition metal phosphides have gained immense attention as promising electrode materials for energy storage and conversion applications. The introduction of a safe and large-scale method of synthesizing a composite of these materials with carbon is of great significance in the fields of electrochemical and materials sciences. In the current effort, we successfully synthesize an iron phosphide/carbon (FeP/C) with a high specific surface area by the pyrolysis of the gel resulting from the hydrothermal treatment of an iron nitrate-phytic acid mixed solution. In comparison with the blank (P/C), the as-synthesized FeP/C appears to be an efficient electrode material for supercapacitor as well as oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) applications in an alkaline medium in a three-electrode system. In the study of supercapacitors, FeP/C shows areal capacitance of 313 mF cm-2 at 1.2 mA cm-2 while retaining 95% of its initial capacitance value after 10 000 cycles, while in the ORR, the synthesized material exhibits high electrocatalytic activity with an onset potential of ca. 0.86 V vs. RHE through the preferred four-electron pathway and less than 6% H2O2 production calculated in the potential range of 0.0-0.7 V vs. RHE. The stability is found to be better than those of the benchmark Pt/C (20 wt%) catalyst. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35528647 PMCID: PMC9070042 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra04326h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1(a) XRD patterns and (b) Raman spectra of P/C and FeP/C.
Fig. 2(a and b) SEM and (c and d) HRTEM images of (a and c) P/C and (b and d) FeP/C, respectively. The white arrows in (a) indicate the presence of spherical particles in the P/C sample. The yellow box in (d) indicates the layered-like structure of FeP/C.
Fig. 3N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms and pore size distribution curves of P/C and FeP/C.
Fig. 4Electrochemical properties measured in a three-electrode system using 3 M KOH as an electrolyte. (a) CV curve comparison of P/C and FeP/C at 100 mV s−1 scan rate, (b) CV curves of FeP/C at various scan rates, (c) GCD curves of FeP/C at different current density, and (d) the cycling performance of FeP/C at 100 mV s−1.
Fig. 5ORR measurements in a three-electrode system using 0.1 M KOH as an electrolyte. (a) CV curve comparison of P/C and FeP/C at 100 mV s−1, (b) LSV curve comparison of P/C, FeP/C, and 20 wt% Pt/C at 1600 rpm, (c) LSV curves of FeP/C at different rotation rates, and (d) Koutecky–Levich plots at different potentials.
Fig. 6(a) RRDE test of the ORR on FeP/C in an O2-saturated 0.1 M KOH electrolyte at a scan rate of 10 mV s−1 and a rotating rate of 1600 rpm; (b) assessment of electron transfer number and peroxide percentage in ORR catalyzed by FeP/C based on RRDE data.