TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanosized carbon-supported manganese oxide phases as lithium-oxygen battery cathode catalysts
AU - Kavakli, Cüneyt
AU - Meini, Stefano
AU - Harzer, Gregor
AU - Tsiouvaras, Nikolaos
AU - Piana, Michele
AU - Siebel, Armin
AU - Garsuch, Arnd
AU - Gasteiger, Hubert A.
AU - Herranz, Juan
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - The poor discharge and recharge efficiency demonstrated by lithium-air batteries renders the search for highly active and inexpensive oxygen reduction and evolution catalysts crucial to the development of these energy-storage and conversion devices. Previous works have shown that manganese oxides are promising lithium-oxygen cathode catalysts, which is in agreement with their remarkable activities for the reduction and evolution of oxygen in aqueous media. Motivated by these resembling catalytic behaviors, we prepared and characterized a number of manganese oxide modifications directly on carbon black and attempted to correlate their oxygen reduction and evolution activities in aprotic and aqueous electrolytes. Although our results cannot confirm this correlation, they provide valuable insight into the reaction mechanisms at play in each medium. More precisely, in 0.1M potassium hydroxide, the reduction of oxygen is related to the reduction of a manganese(III) intermediate whereas the oxidation of hydrogen peroxide (which was regarded as a mimic of the lithium peroxide produced upon lithium-oxygen battery discharge) correlates with the transition between manganese(II) and manganese(III) phases. In the aprotic medium, manganese oxide cathodes prefilled with lithium peroxide showed a strong catalytic effect but were not active in the oxidation of lithium peroxide produced in the previous discharge. This discrepancy is thought to arise from the stark differences in the sizes and morphologies of the lithium peroxide involved in each test, which implies that the catalytic activity of a material for the oxidation of lithium peroxide prefilled on electrodes is not indicative of its behavior in the charging of a real lithium-oxygen cell.
AB - The poor discharge and recharge efficiency demonstrated by lithium-air batteries renders the search for highly active and inexpensive oxygen reduction and evolution catalysts crucial to the development of these energy-storage and conversion devices. Previous works have shown that manganese oxides are promising lithium-oxygen cathode catalysts, which is in agreement with their remarkable activities for the reduction and evolution of oxygen in aqueous media. Motivated by these resembling catalytic behaviors, we prepared and characterized a number of manganese oxide modifications directly on carbon black and attempted to correlate their oxygen reduction and evolution activities in aprotic and aqueous electrolytes. Although our results cannot confirm this correlation, they provide valuable insight into the reaction mechanisms at play in each medium. More precisely, in 0.1M potassium hydroxide, the reduction of oxygen is related to the reduction of a manganese(III) intermediate whereas the oxidation of hydrogen peroxide (which was regarded as a mimic of the lithium peroxide produced upon lithium-oxygen battery discharge) correlates with the transition between manganese(II) and manganese(III) phases. In the aprotic medium, manganese oxide cathodes prefilled with lithium peroxide showed a strong catalytic effect but were not active in the oxidation of lithium peroxide produced in the previous discharge. This discrepancy is thought to arise from the stark differences in the sizes and morphologies of the lithium peroxide involved in each test, which implies that the catalytic activity of a material for the oxidation of lithium peroxide prefilled on electrodes is not indicative of its behavior in the charging of a real lithium-oxygen cell.
KW - Electrocatalysis
KW - Oxygen evolution reaction
KW - Oxygen reduction reaction
KW - Peroxides
KW - Rotating disc electrode
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84889589030&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/cctc.201300331
DO - 10.1002/cctc.201300331
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84889589030
SN - 1867-3880
VL - 5
SP - 3358
EP - 3373
JO - ChemCatChem
JF - ChemCatChem
IS - 11
ER -