Nitrogen-doped graphene (N-graphene) is obtained by exposing graphene to nitrogen plasma. N-graphene exhibits much higher electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen reduction and H2O2 reduction than graphene, and much higher durability and selectivity than the widely-used expensive Pt. The excellent electrochemical performance of N-graphene is attributed to nitrogen functional groups and the specific properties of graphene. This indicates that N-graphene is promising for applications in electrochemical energy devices (fuel cells, metal-air batteries) and biosensors.
Revised: October 22, 2010 |
Published: June 4, 2010
Citation
Shao Y., S. Zhang, M.H. Engelhard, G. Li, G. Shao, Y. Wang, and J. Liu, et al. 2010.Nitrogen-doped Graphene and Its Electrochemical Applications.Journal of Materials Chemistry 20, no. 35:7491-7496.PNNL-SA-71682.doi:10.1039/c0jm00782j