Junkai Wang , Jingyi Xing , Yifei Wang , Xin Zhang , Shaowei Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a versatile green compound, is increasingly in demand. The electrochemical two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e− ORR) is a simple and environmentally friendly substitute method to the traditional anthraquinone oxidation method for H2O2 production. This study systematically investigates the 2e− ORR process on single transition metal atom-loaded boron fullerene (M − B40) using density functional theory calculations. In evaluating the stability of the catalysts, we found that Au, Pd, Pt, Rh, and Ir atoms adsorbed on hexagonal or heptagonal sites of B40 exhibit good stability. Among these, Pd-modified B40 heptagonal cavity (Pd-B40-heptagonal) demonstrates an ideal Gibbs free energy change for OOH* (4.49 eV) and efficiently catalyzes H2O2 production at a low overpotential (0.27 V). Electronic structure analysis reveals that electron transfer between Pd-B40-heptagonal and adsorbed O2 facilitates O2 activation. Additionally, the high 2e− ORR activity of Pd-B40-heptagonal is attributed to electron transfer from the Pd-d orbitals to the π* anti-bonding of p orbitals of OOH*, moderately activating the O-O bond. This study offers valuable understanding designing high-performance electrocatalysts for 2e− ORR.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Molecular Graphics and Modelling is devoted to the publication of papers on the uses of computers in theoretical investigations of molecular structure, function, interaction, and design. The scope of the journal includes all aspects of molecular modeling and computational chemistry, including, for instance, the study of molecular shape and properties, molecular simulations, protein and polymer engineering, drug design, materials design, structure-activity and structure-property relationships, database mining, and compound library design.
As a primary research journal, JMGM seeks to bring new knowledge to the attention of our readers. As such, submissions to the journal need to not only report results, but must draw conclusions and explore implications of the work presented. Authors are strongly encouraged to bear this in mind when preparing manuscripts. Routine applications of standard modelling approaches, providing only very limited new scientific insight, will not meet our criteria for publication. Reproducibility of reported calculations is an important issue. Wherever possible, we urge authors to enhance their papers with Supplementary Data, for example, in QSAR studies machine-readable versions of molecular datasets or in the development of new force-field parameters versions of the topology and force field parameter files. Routine applications of existing methods that do not lead to genuinely new insight will not be considered.