Shaping a Doped Perovskite Oxide with Measured Grain Boundary Defects to Catalyze Bifunctional Oxygen Activation for a Rechargeable Zn-Air Battery

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Sep 9;12(36):40355-40363. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c11606. Epub 2020 Aug 26.

Abstract

Symmetry broken configurations within a long-range atomic arrangement exhibit new physical properties, and distinctive strategies are needed to resuscitate the localized symmetry by introducing measured defects, which can be attractive in displaying enhanced catalytic activities for energy applications. Our hypothesis is validated by introducing lattice defects due to the strain originating from a slightly higher doped grain boundary (GB) than at the interconnected grains of perovskite oxide. When Pd is doped at the B-site of ABO3-type La0.7Sr0.3CoO3-δ, a marginally higher ionic radius of Pd4+ than Co3+ enables partial deportation of Pd4+ to the GB. Consequently, the GB unit cell is relatively expanded with a higher interplanar spacing, as observed by microscopic analysis. When the Pd concentration is increased, oxygen vacancy sites are reduced and both metallic Pd and PdOx are exsolved at the perovskite oxide surface. With the Pd/Co ratio of 0.05, the defects originating from the Pd-modulated GB can be maximized to 1.29 ± 0.21% which enhances the bifunctional O2 activation ability by lowering the combined overpotential of oxygen evolution and reduction reactions (OER/ORR) to 0.91 V, duly corroborated by computational studies. The fabricated rechargeable Zn-air battery has a specific capacity of 740 mA·h/gZn (851 mW·h/gZn) when discharge is performed at 10 mA/cm2. Galvanostatic charge-discharge cycling with a 1 h cycle time shows 60 h stable performance. The OER/ORR bifunctional activity is found to be strongly correlated to the repositioned lattice symmetry at the perovskite GB.

Keywords: Zn−air battery; bifunctional oxygen activation; defects; exsolution; grain boundary; noble metal doping; perovskite oxide.