Abstract

Various silicon carbide nanostructures are attracting close attention due to their excellent performance and great potential, including utilization in a variety of catalytic applications. Approaches, utilizing different industrial wastes as a starting material for the synthesis of SiC nanoparticles, are especially distinguished due to their environmental friendliness. This paper demonstrates a new two-stage technique of the preparation of dispersed SiC/C nanocomposite. A highly mineralized carbonaceous residue obtained by thermal processing of agricultural waste was used as a precursor for the synthesis in a pulsed arc discharge plasma. Rice husks, oat husks and oat straw were chosen as agricultural wastes with a high content of silicon in the mineral component. Carbonaceous residues (biochars) were obtained from the selected wastes by oxidative carbonization in a reactor with a fluidized bed of a deep oxidation catalyst at 460 °C. High-energy (up to 20 kJ) treatment of the obtained biochars in a pulsed (up to 1 ms) arc discharge plasma jet resulted in synthesizing a nanodispersed material (particle size <50 nm) containing hexagonal silicon carbide α-SiC. The principal possibility of using the synthesized SiC-based composite as a catalyst and cocatalyst of platinum in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) of water splitting is shown. The most impressive results (η10 = 18–28 mV, η100 = 84–98 mV, b = 32–64 mV) comparable with standard commercial Pt/C samples were obtained by modifying the synthesized SiC-based composite with 5 % platinum. Thus, the developed approach allows us to convert the agricultural waste into useful high-tech products in the form of an electrocatalytically active material.

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