Abstract

AbstractConjugated polymers with tailorable composition and microarchitecture are propitious for modulating catalytic properties and deciphering inherent structure‐performance relationships. Herein, we report a facile linker engineering strategy to manipulate the electronic states of metallophthalocyanine conjugated polymers and uncover the vital role of organic linkers in facilitating electrocatalytic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Specifically, a set of cobalt phthalocyanine conjugated polymers (CoPc‐CPs) wrapped onto carbon nanotubes (denoted CNTs@CoPc‐CPs) are judiciously crafted via in situ assembling square‐planar cobalt tetraaminophthalocyanine (CoPc(NH2)4) with different linear aromatic dialdehyde‐based organic linkers in the presence of CNTs. Intriguingly, upon varying the electronic characteristic of organic linkers from terephthalaldehyde (TA) to 2,5‐thiophenedicarboxaldehyde (TDA) and then to thieno/thiophene‐2,5‐dicarboxaldehyde (bTDA), their corresponding CNTs@CoPc‐CPs exhibit gradually improved electrocatalytic ORR performance. More importantly, theoretical calculations reveal that the charge transfer from CoPc units to electron‐withdrawing linkers (i.e., TDA and bTDA) drives the delocalization of Co d‐orbital electrons, thereby downshifting the Co d‐band energy level. Accordingly, the active Co centers with more positive valence state exhibit optimized binding energy toward ORR‐relevant intermediates and thus a balanced adsorption/desorption pathway that endows significant enhancement in electrocatalytic ORR. This work demonstrates a molecular‐level engineering route for rationally designing efficient polymer catalysts and gaining insightful understanding of electrocatalytic mechanisms.

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