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Transient and general synthesis of high-density and ultrasmall nanoparticles on two-dimensional porous carbon via coordinated carbothermal shock.

Authors :
Shi, Wenhui
Li, Zezhou
Gong, Zhihao
Liang, Zihui
Liu, Hanwen
Han, Ye-Chuang
Niu, Huiting
Song, Bo
Chi, Xiaodong
Zhou, Jihan
Wang, Hua
Xia, Bao Yu
Yao, Yonggang
Tian, Zhong-Qun
Source :
Nature Communications; 4/21/2023, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Carbon-supported nanoparticles are indispensable to enabling new energy technologies such as metal-air batteries and catalytic water splitting. However, achieving ultrasmall and high-density nanoparticles (optimal catalysts) faces fundamental challenges of their strong tendency toward coarsening and agglomeration. Herein, we report a general and efficient synthesis of high-density and ultrasmall nanoparticles uniformly dispersed on two-dimensional porous carbon. This is achieved through direct carbothermal shock pyrolysis of metal-ligand precursors in just ~100 ms, the fastest among reported syntheses. Our results show that the in situ metal-ligand coordination (e.g., N → Co<superscript>2+</superscript>) and local ordering during millisecond-scale pyrolysis play a crucial role in kinetically dominated fabrication and stabilization of high-density nanoparticles on two-dimensional porous carbon films. The as-obtained samples exhibit excellent activity and stability as bifunctional catalysts in oxygen redox reactions. Considering the huge flexibility in coordinated precursors design, diversified single and multielement nanoparticles (M = Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Cr, Mn, Ag, etc) were generally fabricated, even in systems well beyond traditional crystalline coordination chemistry. Our method allows for the transient and general synthesis of well-dispersed nanoparticles with great simplicity and versatility for various application schemes. Well-dispersed nanoparticles are critical for catalysis but face challenges of easy agglomeration. Here the authors report synthesis of ultrasmall nanoparticles anchored on two-dimensional porous carbon via coordinated carbothermal shock and the application of resulted nanoparticles as catalysts for oxygen electrocatalysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163253557
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38023-5