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Single‐Atom Co Meets Remote Fe for a Synergistic Boost in Oxygen Electrocatalysis
Author(s) -
Li Zongge,
Kang Wenjun,
Lin Jingkai,
Li Rui,
Qu Konggang,
Zeng Suyuan,
Wang Lei,
Meng Fanpeng,
Zhang Huayang,
Li Haibo
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.202500617
Subject(s) - electrocatalyst , materials science , oxygen , atom (system on chip) , oxygen atom , oxygen evolution , fuel cells , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , chemistry , electrochemistry , computer science , electrode , physics , quantum mechanics , molecule , engineering , embedded system
Abstract The oxygen electrocatalytic activity of transition metal catalysts can be tuned by tailoring their microstructure to optimize electronic configuration. Here, a one‐step Coordination‐Selective Synthesis strategy is developed to integrate Co single‐atom sites and Fe‐based nanoparticles within the same matrix, enabling long‐range electronic interactions that enhance Co‐N 4 reactivity and improve oxygen reduction reaction performance. X‐ray absorption spectroscopy confirmed that remote Fe‐based nanoparticles modulate the electron distribution at Co‐N 4 sites. Structural characterizations reveal that the optimal catalyst, Co 50% Fe 50% ‐NC, contains metallic Fe, Fe 3 O 4 , and Fe 4 N species. Electrochemical measurements show that it achieves onset and half‐wave potentials of 0.984 and 0.927 V versus RHE, surpassing Co 100% ‐NC with only Co‐N 4 sites. Additionally, it demonstrates efficient oxygen evolution reaction performance, achieving an overpotential of 298 mV at 20 mA cm −2 , comparable to RuO 2 . Density functional theory calculations reveal that Fe 4 N optimizes O‐containing intermediate adsorption/desorption, lowering the theoretical overpotential. Zn‐air batteries assembled with Co 50% Fe 50% ‐NC exhibited superior performance to Pt/C, highlighting its potential for bifunctional oxygen electrocatalysis. This study provides an approach for designing high‐performance catalysts by utilizing synergistic interactions between atomic and nanoscale metal species.

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