Interface engineering of superhydrophobic octadecanethiol-functionalized hollow mesoporous carbon spheres for alkaline oxygen reduction to hydrogen peroxide†
Abstract
Direct electrosynthesis by a two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e− ORR) is an effective and promising synthetic method for producing H2O2. However, the rate of the oxygen reduction reaction is greatly limited by the slow transport of O2. Interface engineering is an important means to control reactive microenvironments. Herein, we modified hollow mesoporous carbon spheres (HMCSs) with 1-octadecanethiol (ODT) to form a superhydrophobic interface, which provides an O2-enriched surface layer at the catalytically active site and enhances O2 adsorption. In 0.1 M KOH, the ODT-functionalized HMCSs (HMCSs@ODT) exhibits superior activity for H2O2 synthesis with 94.6% H2O2 selectivity across a wide potential range. During the electrolysis process, the hydrophobic interface can effectively release the H2O2 from the surface of the catalyst and prevent their further reduction to H2O. In an H-cell system, HMCSs@ODT exhibits a remarkable H2O2 yield rate of 838.8 mmol gcat.−1 h−1 and a notable faradaic efficiency of 95.2% at 0.365 V. The combination of the mesoporous structure and superhydrophobic interface provides a research idea for the electrochemical synthesis of H2O2.