Nitrogen doped carbon nanotubes and nanofibers for green hydrogen production: Similarities in the nature of nitrogen species, metal–nitrogen interaction, and catalytic properties

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Abstract

The effect of nitrogen doped bamboo-like carbon nanotubes (N–CNTs) on the properties of supported platinum (0.2 and 1 wt %) catalysts in formic acid decomposition for hydrogen production was studied. It was shown that both impregnation and homogeneous precipitation routes led to the formation of electron-deficient platinum stabilized by pyridinic nitrogen sites of the N–CNTs. The electron-deficient platinum species strongly enhanced the activity and selectivity of the Pt/N–CNTs catalysts when compared to the catalysts containing mainly metallic platinum nanoparticles. A comparison of bamboo-like N–CNTs and herring-bone nitrogen doped carbon nanofibers (N–CNFs) as the catalyst support allowed us to conclude that the catalytic properties of supported platinum are determined by its locally one-type interaction with pyridinic nitrogen sites of the N–CNTs or N–CNFs irrespective of substantial structural differences between nanotubes and nanofibers.

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Podyacheva, O., Lisitsyn, A., Kibis, L., Boronin, A., Stonkus, O., Zaikovskii, V., … Parmon, V. (2019). Nitrogen doped carbon nanotubes and nanofibers for green hydrogen production: Similarities in the nature of nitrogen species, metal–nitrogen interaction, and catalytic properties. Energies, 12(20). https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203976

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