(687g) Quantification of Catalytically Relevant Fe Species in Nitrogen-Doped Carbon | AIChE

(687g) Quantification of Catalytically Relevant Fe Species in Nitrogen-Doped Carbon

Authors 

Bates, J. - Presenter, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Hall, M. N., University of Wisconsin
Martinez, J. J., University of Wisconsin-Madison
Al-Omari, A., University of Wisconsin-Madison
Root, T. W., University of Wisconsin
Stahl, S. S., University of Wisconsin-Madison
Heterogeneous catalysts consisting of iron cations incorporated into nitrogen-doped carbon (“Fe-N-C”) have received extensive attention as leading alternatives to Pt for the electrochemical oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), and additionally catalyze the thermal oxidation of organic molecules with O2 as the oxidant. Fe-N-C catalysts host mononuclear nitrogen-ligated active centers, FeNx, that frequently coexist with agglomerated Fe species. Although FeNx are the dominant active centers for ORR electrocatalysis and many aerobic oxidations, the accuracies of methods to quantify them are still debated. Here, we develop a kinetic probe-reaction approach to quantify FeNx centers and compare it with spectroscopic and probe-molecular methods.

Initial rates of the aerobic oxidation of a water-soluble hydroquinone (HQ) were measured under kinetically controlled and mechanistically well-defined conditions (303 K, 50 mM HQ, 1.1 atm O2, 0.5 M aqueous H2SO4). Fe-N-C catalysts were synthesized to contain mononuclear FeNx species at low loadings (0.1–0.4 wt% bulk Fe) on solvent-accessible surfaces using a postsynthetic metalation approach and their Fe speciation was confirmed by low-temperature 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy. The HQ oxidation rate (rHQ, per gcatalyst) catalyzed by these well-defined materials correlates linearly with the density of FeNx centers (NFeNx), reflecting their intrinsic HQ oxidation turnover frequency (TOFFeNx). Assuming negligible contributions to rHQ from other Fe species, HQ oxidation was evaluated as a kinetic probe to estimate the density of FeNx species (NFeNx = rHQ / TOFFeNx) in a suite of Fe-N-C catalysts with diverse synthetic origins and Fe speciation (0.3–8.4 wt% bulk Fe). Kinetically determined FeNx site densities are compared with those estimated by low-temperature 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy, pulse CO chemisorption, and electrochemical stripping of NO derived from NO2−. Kinetic quantifications of FeNx centers correlate well with probe-molecular methods and do not require pretreatments that may alter active-site distributions or specialized equipment, offering an attractive complementary approach.

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