Scalable production of reduced graphene oxide via biowaste valorisation: An efficient oxygen reduction reaction towards metal-free electrocatalysis

The development of substantial, environmental-friendly and low-cost electrocatalysts for efficient oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is essentially important for the production and storage of green energy which has sparked the curiosity of researchers for scalable production of metal-free electrocatalysts from biowaste. We report an easy transformation of chestnut-derived biowaste into reduced graphene oxide (rGO) and pyridinic-N-dominated nitrogen-doped rGO (NCS-rGO). The synthesized catalyst exhibits better ORR activity with an onset and half-wave potential of 0.93 V and 0.86 V, respectively; along with a high diffusion-limiting current density of 5.05 mA cm-2. In alkaline conditions, we found that NCS-rGO shows outrageously high electrocatalytic activity that is superior to the commercial 20% Pt/C catalyst. More notably, NCS-rGO-based ORR electrocatalyst manifests higher methanol tolerance, without deterioration in catalytic activity even in the presence of significant amounts of methanol, outperforming the current state-of-the-art Pt electrocatalyst. Density functional theory (DFT) studies illustrate that pyridinic N is a decisive part of NCS-rGO to achieve the best ORR performance.

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