Developing efficient, inexpensive, and durable electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is important for the large‐scale commercialization of fuel cells and metal–air batteries. Herein, a hierarchically porous bimetallic Fe/Co single‐atom‐coordinated N‐doped carbon (Fe/Co‐Nx‐C) electrocatalyst for ORR is synthesized from Fe/Co‐coordinated polyporphyrin using silica template‐assisted and silica‐protection synthetic strategies. In the synthesis, first silica nanoparticles‐embedded, silica‐protected Fe/Co‐polyporphyrin is prepared. It is then pyrolyzed and treated with acidic solution. The resulting Fe/Co‐Nx‐C material has a large specific surface area, large electrochemically active surface area, good conductivity, and catalytically active Fe/Co‐Nx sites. The material exhibits a very good electrocatalytic activity for the ORR in alkaline media, with a half‐wave potential of 0.86 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, which is better than that of Pt/C (20 wt%). Furthermore, it shows an outstanding operational stability and durability during the reaction. A zinc–air battery (ZAB) assembled using Fe/Co‐Nx‐C as an air‐cathode electrocatalyst gives a high peak power density (152.0 mW cm−2) and shows a good recovery property. Furthermore, the performance of the battery is better than a corresponding ZAB containing Pt/C as an electrocatalyst. The work also demonstrates a synthetic route to a highly active, stable, and scalable single‐atom electrocatalyst for ORR in ZABs.
Nanometer level α-Fe2O3 is a sort of important nanometer material, which can be used comprehensive in the field of catalysis, ultraviolet radiation absorption material, functional ceramics and so on. This article uses the method of microwave radiation combined with high temperature sintering to prepare dispersive and symmetrical α-Fe2O3 nanometer grains for the first time, and this method not only may reduce the reactive cycle, but also may enhance the concentration of reactive initial solution of FeCl3. At the same time, in the process of experiment we found that if we put different crystal promotion agents in reaction solution at different calcining heat and calcining time, we can obtain round, cubic or rod-like α-Fe2O3 nanometer grains separately.
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