Harnessing Pyridinic N Vacancy Defect in Microporous Structures to Induce the Pre-Adsorption of Oxygen and Boost Oxygen Reduction Reaction Kinetics

  • Binbin Jia
  • , Xuan Xie
  • , Jie Lin
  • , Huiqing Wang
  • , Pengfei Hu
  • , Fengyi Wang
  • , Xiaoyu Fan*
  • , Jinlong Zheng*
  • , Tianyi Ma*
  • , Liqun Ye*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Defect structures within the carbon matrix play a crucial role in enhancing the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity of Fe single atom and nitrogen-doped catalysts (Fe-N-C SACs). However, overlooking the O2 pre-adsorption process induced by defective structures hampers the precise identification of active sites and the investigation of the reaction mechanism in Fe-N-C SACs. Hence, we report a Fe SAC with abundant pyridinic N vacancy defects in microporous structures (Fe-Nv-C SAC) and propose a synergistic effect between pyridinic N vacancy defects and O2 molecules that promotes the kinetics of ORR. The developed Fe-Nv-C SAC demonstrates exceptional ORR performance, exhibiting superior mass activity and turnover frequency compared to conventional Fe-N-C SACs. The in situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and theoretical calculations indicate that pyridinic N vacancy defects in microporous structures facilitate pre-adsorption of O2 molecules results in the d-band centers of central Fe atoms shifting away from the fermi level. This shift weakens the adsorption strength of *OH species, thereby facilitating the kinetic process of ORR. This work addresses a critical gap in the field of electrocatalysis by providing the experimental validation of pre-adsorption of O2 molecules on Fe single-atom catalysts, a phenomenon previously only speculated through theoretical calculations.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202508674
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume64
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 Sep 2025

Keywords

  • Fe single atom
  • Microporous structure
  • Oxygen reduction reaction
  • Pyridinic N vacancy defects
  • Reactant pre-adsorption

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