Cobalt-Yttria Heterointerface on Nitrogen and Sulphur-Doped Carbon as a Durable Electrocatalyst for Metal-Air Battery and Overall Water Electrolysis
Abstract
The development of an efficient, cost-effective trifunctional electrocatalyst is critical to advancing next-generation energy conversion and storage technologies. A trifunctional electrocatalyst comprising a heterointerface of cobalt-yttria nanoparticles embedded in nitrogen- and sulphur-codoped reduced graphene oxide was synthesised via a hydrothermal, mechanochemical, and pyrolysis approach. Electrochemical studies demonstrate that Co-Y2O3 heterointerface in heteroatom-doped carbon exhibits outstanding oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity with an onset potential of 0.97 V and a half-wave potential of 0.85 V in alkaline media, rivalling commercial Pt/C. Additionally, it shows superior performance in oxygen evolution and hydrogen evolution reactions (E10 = 1.535 V for OER and η10 = 228 mV for HER). The exceptional bifunctional activity (ΔE = 0.69 V) arises from the synergistic effects of the Y2O3 and Co species in the heterojunctions, as well as N & S heteroatom doping, as evidenced by comparative studies with control samples. The practical applicability was validated in both liquid and solid-state rechargeable zinc-air batteries, where it delivered higher energy densities (879 mW h gZn-1) and ultrahigh stability (>1400 hours), outperforming the Pt/C+RuO2 benchmark combination. The post-mortem analysis confirms the strong stabilisation of cobalt nanoparticles in yttria and the retention of their heterostructures. The results suggest that it is a highly promising non-noble metal-based catalyst for sustainable electrochemical energy devices.
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