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Photothermal effect enables markedly enhanced oxygen reduction and evolution activities for high-performance Zn-air batteries
Ist Teil von
Journal of materials chemistry. A, Materials for energy and sustainability, 2021-09, Vol.9 (35), p.19734-1974
Ort / Verlag
Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
The ability to craft high-performance and cost-effective bifunctional oxygen catalysts opens up pivotal perspectives for commercialization of zinc-air batteries (ZABs). Despite recent grand advances in the development of synthetic techniques, the overall performance of electrocatalytic processes enters the bottleneck stage through focusing only on the design and modification of bifunctional catalyst materials. Herein, we report a simple yet robust strategy to markedly boost the performance of ZABs
via
capitalizing on the photothermal effect. Concretely, a bifunctional electrocatalyst comprising Co
3
O
4
nanoparticles encapsulated within N-doped reduced graphene oxide (denoted as Co
3
O
4
/N-rGO) acted as both active material and photothermal component. Upon light illumination, the compelling photothermal effect of Co
3
O
4
/N-rGO rendered a localized and instant heating of the electrode with more active sites, enhanced electrical conductivity and improved release of bubbles. As such, a prominently reduced indicator Δ
E
of 0.635 V was realized, significantly outperforming recently reported systems (usually >0.68 V). Corresponding rechargeable ZABs based on Co
3
O
4
/N-rGO air electrodes possessed an excellent maximum power density of 299 mW cm
−2
(1.8 times that of Pt/Ru-based ZABs) assisted by the photothermal effect with a superb cycling stability (over 500 cycles). This intensification strategy opens vast possibilities to ameliorate the performance of catalysts
via
innovatively and conveniently utilizing their photothermal feature, which may advance future application in high-performance ZABs and other energy conversion and storage systems.
A simple yet robust strategy was reported to markedly boost the performance of ZABs
via
capitalizing on the photothermal effect.