Platinum group metal (PGM)-free catalysts represented by nitrogen and iron co-doped carbon (Fe-N-C) catalysts are desirable and critical for metal-air batteries, but challenges still exist in performance and stability. Here, cerium oxides (CeOx) are incorporated into a two-dimensional Fe-N-C catalyst (FeNC-Ce-950) via a host-guest strategy. The Ce4+/Ce3+ redox system creates a large number of oxygen vacancies for rapid O2 adsorption to accelerate the kinetics of oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Consequently, the as-synthesized FeNC-Ce-950 catalyst exhibits a half-wave potential (E1/2) of 0.921 V and negligible decay (<2 mV for ΔE1/2) after 5,000 accelerated durability cycles, significantly outperforming most of ORR catalysts reported in recent years and precious metal counterparts. When applied in a zinc-air battery, it demonstrates a peak power density of 175 mW cm-2 and a specific capacity of 757 mAh gZn-1. This study also provides a reference for the exploration of Fe-N-C catalysts decorated with variable valence metal oxides.
Keywords: Ce(4+)/Ce(3+) redox system; Cerium oxides; Nitrogen and iron co-doped carbon catalyst; Oxygen reduction reaction; Zinc-air battery.
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