Issue 17, 2013

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

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.

Graphical abstract: Ball milling: a green mechanochemical approach for synthesis of nitrogen doped carbon nanoparticles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 May 2013
Accepted
23 Jun 2013
First published
26 Jun 2013
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2013,5, 7970-7976

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

T. Xing, J. Sunarso, W. Yang, Y. Yin, A. M. Glushenkov, L. H. Li, P. C. Howlett and Y. Chen, Nanoscale, 2013, 5, 7970 DOI: 10.1039/C3NR02328A

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