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Heterojunction‐Assisted Co 3 S 4 @Co 3 O 4 Core–Shell Octahedrons for Supercapacitors and Both Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide Reduction Reactions
Author(s) -
Yan Yibo,
Li Kaixin,
Chen Xiaoping,
Yang Yanhui,
Lee JongMin
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201701724
Subject(s) - overpotential , cobalt sulfide , catalysis , electron transfer , cobalt , materials science , adsorption , bifunctional , inorganic chemistry , electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide , chemistry , chemical engineering , photochemistry , electrochemistry , electrode , carbon monoxide , biochemistry , engineering
Expedition of electron transfer efficiency and optimization of surface reactant adsorption products desorption processes are two main challenges for developing non‐noble catalysts in the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and CO 2 reduction reaction (CRR). A heterojunction prototype on Co 3 S 4 @Co 3 O 4 core–shell octahedron structure is established via hydrothermal lattice anion exchange protocol to implement the electroreduction of oxygen and carbon dioxide with high performance. The synergistic bifunctional catalyst consists of p‐type Co 3 O 4 core and n‐type Co 3 S 4 shell, which afford high surface electron density along with high capacitance without sacrificing mechanical robustness. A four electron ORR process, identical to the Pt catalyzed ORR, is validated using the core–shell octahedron catalyst. The synergistic interaction between cobalt sulfide and cobalt oxide bicatalyst reduces the activation energy to convert CO 2 into adsorbed intermediates and hereby enables CRR to run at a low overpotential, with formate as the highly selective main product at a high faraday efficiency of 85.3%. The remarkable performance can be ascribed to the synergistic coupling effect of the structured co‐catalysts; heterojunction structure expedites the electron transfer efficiency and optimizes surface reactant adsorption product desorption processes, which also provide theoretical and pragmatic guideline for catalyst development and mechanism explorations.

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