Abstract

Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) are of paramount importance towards to regenerative fuel cells and rechargeable metal-air batteries. Many efforts have been devoted to developing high active ORR and OER bifunctional electrocatalysts to improve the efficiency of devices. However, the possibility of using free solar energy in ORR/OER electrocatalysts to get higher efficiency in the devices has not yet been recognized. Herein, we report a photo-responsive bifunctional ORR/OER electrocatalyst with a built-in p-n heterojunction based on Ni12P5 nanoparticles (NPs) coupled strongly with nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes (NCNT). The Ni12P5@NCNT hybrid catalyst exhibited unusually high catalytic activities for both ORR (onset potential at 0.90V vs. RHE) and OER (η = 360mV @10mAcm−2) in 0.1M KOH solution with a ΔE (EOERj = 10 - EORR1/2) = 0.82V, comparable to that of its state-of-the-art counterparts (e.g., Pt for ORR, IrO2 for OER). Upon light irradiation (300W Xenon lamp equipped with an AM 1.5G filter, 5cm to electrode), the ΔE further decreased to 0.80V. A rechargeable Zn-air battery devised from a Ni12P5@NCNT cathode in 6M KOH/0.2M Zn(Ac)2 exhibited a low charge-discharge voltage gap (~ 0.75V @ 10mAcm−2, charge potential = 1.94V and discharge potential = 1.19V) and a remarkable cycling stability over 500 cycles, which, upon the light irradiation, showed an even lower charge potential of 1.90V and higher discharge potential of 1.22V (i.e., a charge-discharge voltage gap: 0.68V @ 10mAcm−2). The irradiation caused also a concomitant increase in the round-trip efficiency from ~ 61.3% to ~ 64.2%. To demonstrate the potential applications in portable/wearable electronic devices, we have also developed all solid-state flexible photo-assisted rechargeable Zn-air batteries based on the Ni12P5@NCNT air electrode with high-performance in the both presence and absence of light irradiation. This conceptual demonstration of the first photo-responsive ORR/OER bifunctional catalyst is significant as it reveals a novel catalytic mechanism, from which a class of new bifunctional catalysts with further enhanced photo-responsive performance could be developed, using in other rechargeable metal-air batteries.

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