Ball milling: A green mechanochemical approach for synthesis of nitrogen doped carbon nanoparticles

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Abstract

Technological and scientific challenges coupled with environmental considerations have attracted a search for robust, green and energy-efficient synthesis and processing routes for advanced functional nanomaterials. In this article, we demonstrate a high-energy ball milling technique for large-scale synthesis of nitrogen doped carbon nanoparticles, which can be used as an electro-catalyst for oxygen reduction reactions after a structural refinement with controlled thermal annealing. The resulting carbon nanoparticles exhibited competitive catalytic activity (5.2 mA cm-2 kinetic-limiting current density compared with 7.6 mA cm-2 on Pt/C reference) and excellent methanol tolerance compared to a commercial Pt/C catalyst. The proposed synthesis route by ball milling and annealing is an effective process for carbon nanoparticle production and efficient nitrogen doping, providing a large-scale production method for the development of highly efficient and practical electrocatalysts. © 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

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Xing, T., Sunarso, J., Yang, W., Yin, Y., Glushenkov, A. M., Li, L. H., … Chen, Y. (2013). Ball milling: A green mechanochemical approach for synthesis of nitrogen doped carbon nanoparticles. Nanoscale, 5(17), 7970–7976. https://doi.org/10.1039/c3nr02328a

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