Suppressing H2O2 formation in oxygen reduction reaction using Co-Cu composite electrodes

12 April 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Transition metal oxides form the basis of promising oxygen reduction electrocatalysts due to their low cost, high activity, and abundance on the planet. A new class of Cu[Co]Ox/Au catalyst was found to exhibit high activity and selectivity for the complete reduction of oxygen to water. The Cu-rich composite Cu0.8Co0.2Ox/Au electrodes exhibited nearly 97.5 % selectivity for water compared to either CuOx/Au (80 %) or CoOx/Au (70 %). Cu0.8Co0.2Ox/Au exhibited higher activity, stability, and better selectivity over a wide potential range when compared to well-known ORR catalysts such as Pt. In situ Raman spectroscopy revealed that the introduction of Co into CuOx resulted in the formation of under-coordinated Co centers within CuOx frameworks. These under-coordinated Co centers act as active sites for the scission of O-O bonds resulting in preferential formation of 4e reduction products. The composite electrode also demonstrated a superior hydrogen peroxide reduction ability.

Keywords

oxygen reduction reaction
copper oxide
cobalt oxide
electrochemistry
in situ Raman spectroscopy

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information to the paper
Description
The supporting information contains additional data from various experiments. The SEM and EDX spectra of electrodes, ICP-OES measurements, additional electrochemical data pertaining to the calculation of ECSA, electron transfers numbers, and yield of H2O2, estimation of kinetic currents.
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