Abstract

In recent years, porous heteroatom-doped carbon materials have been very promising for energy conversion. A newly designed porous organic polymer (POPQ) has been synthesized using two organic monomers, i.e., 2,6-diaminoanthraquinone and cyanuric chloride, under reflux conditions for 72 h in an inert atmosphere. The triazine-containing porous organic polymers undergo pyrolysis, which produces two nitrogen-doped porous carbon materials, N/POPQ600 and N/POPQ800, at 600 and 800 °C temperatures, respectively. Since the resultant N-doped porous materials have a higher surface area than the parent porous organic polymer and the materials have a synergistic effect due to the enriched nitrogen content throughout the matrix, the metal-free N/POPQ600 and N/POPQ800 materials exhibit good electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Among these, the N/POPQ800 material shows excellent ORR activity with a nearly four-electron oxygen reduction pathway where the half-wave potential is estimated to be 0.728 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE), comparable with the commercially available Pt/C catalyst. Most interestingly, the N/POPQ800 catalyst displays outstanding long-lasting stability. It shows a better methanol tolerance capability than Pt/C, which can be attributed to the high specific surface area and N-doped well-defined crystalline porous structure. Also, the homogeneously distributed active sites throughout the carbon framework are the most precious for the electrochemical oxygen reduction reaction.

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