The chemical groups present at the surface of graphite have been thought for a long time to be mainly responsible for its catalytic activity in the oxygen reduction reaction. Recently, it was proposed that the surface defects of graphite also significantly contribute to promote this reaction. Although the behaviour of surface defects has been reported, only few comments have been dedicated to their involvement in the mechanism and the possible intermediate species in the oxygen reduction reaction. Herein, we aim to present a more detailed explanation of the catalytic activity of graphite particles based on the structure of their defects and their size. Structural, spectroscopic and magnetic investigation (X-ray diffraction, Raman and electron spin resonance) and electrochemical measurements were performed to describe the nature of the defects and their aptitude to transfer electrons. Computational description supplied precise details of the energy of the different defects and their ability to promote the reduction, also suggesting the structure of the intermediate adduct in the oxygen reduction. The results indicated that molecular oxygen preferentially interacts with graphite defects, which involve the π-electron system and accumulation of the spin density on the edges of the grains, in particular, on the zig-zag edges present on ball-milled graphite. This promotes the reactivity of this nanomaterial. Furthermore, the activation increases by decreasing the particle size

Greco, C., Cosentino, U., Pitea, D., Moro, G., Santangelo, S., Patanè, S., et al. (2019). Role of the carbon defects in the catalytic oxygen reduction by graphite nanoparticles: a spectromagnetic, electrochemical and computational integrated approach. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 21(11), 6021-6032 [10.1039/c8cp07023g].

Role of the carbon defects in the catalytic oxygen reduction by graphite nanoparticles: a spectromagnetic, electrochemical and computational integrated approach

Greco, Claudio;Cosentino, Ugo
;
Pitea, Demetrio;Moro, Giorgio;D'Arienzo, Massimiliano;Fiore, Michele;Morazzoni, Franca;Ruffo, Riccardo
2019

Abstract

The chemical groups present at the surface of graphite have been thought for a long time to be mainly responsible for its catalytic activity in the oxygen reduction reaction. Recently, it was proposed that the surface defects of graphite also significantly contribute to promote this reaction. Although the behaviour of surface defects has been reported, only few comments have been dedicated to their involvement in the mechanism and the possible intermediate species in the oxygen reduction reaction. Herein, we aim to present a more detailed explanation of the catalytic activity of graphite particles based on the structure of their defects and their size. Structural, spectroscopic and magnetic investigation (X-ray diffraction, Raman and electron spin resonance) and electrochemical measurements were performed to describe the nature of the defects and their aptitude to transfer electrons. Computational description supplied precise details of the energy of the different defects and their ability to promote the reduction, also suggesting the structure of the intermediate adduct in the oxygen reduction. The results indicated that molecular oxygen preferentially interacts with graphite defects, which involve the π-electron system and accumulation of the spin density on the edges of the grains, in particular, on the zig-zag edges present on ball-milled graphite. This promotes the reactivity of this nanomaterial. Furthermore, the activation increases by decreasing the particle size
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
CO2, graphite, density functional theory
English
2019
21
11
6021
6032
reserved
Greco, C., Cosentino, U., Pitea, D., Moro, G., Santangelo, S., Patanè, S., et al. (2019). Role of the carbon defects in the catalytic oxygen reduction by graphite nanoparticles: a spectromagnetic, electrochemical and computational integrated approach. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 21(11), 6021-6032 [10.1039/c8cp07023g].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/223380
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