Bottom-up construction of efficient active sites in transition metal-nitrogen-carbon (M-N-C) catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) from single molecular building blocks remains one of the most difficult challenges. Herein, we… Click to show full abstract
Bottom-up construction of efficient active sites in transition metal-nitrogen-carbon (M-N-C) catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) from single molecular building blocks remains one of the most difficult challenges. Herein, we report a bottom-up approach to produce a highly active Cu-N4-C catalyst with well-defined Cu-N4 coordination sites derived from a small molecular copper complex containing Cu-N4 moieties. The Cu-N4 moieties were found to be covalently integrated into graphene sheets to create the Cu-N4 active sites for ORR. Furthermore, the activity was boosted by tuning the structure of active sites. We find that the high ORR activity of the Cu-N4-C catalyst is related to the Cu-N4 center linked to edges of the graphene sheets, where the electronic structure of the Cu center has the right symmetry for the degenerate π* orbital of the O2 molecule. These findings point out the direction for the synthesis of the M-N-C catalysts at the molecular level.
               
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