In organic chemistry, atoms other than carbon and hydrogen are generally referred to as heteroatoms. The most common heteroatoms are nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur. Now I present to you an article called The Energy Level Regulation of CoMo Carbonate Hydroxide for the Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction Activity, published in 2019-03-18, which mentions a compound: 17524-05-9, mainly applied to cobalt molybdenum carbonate hydroxide electrocatalyst oxygen evolution reaction, Category: nitriles-buliding-blocks.
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) accompanied by multistep proton-coupled electron transfer is the decisive step of electrochem. water splitting due to the sluggish kinetics process. Enhancing the efficiency of water splitting indispensably requires stable and high-efficiency electrocatalysts for OER. The OER activity of electrocatalysts can be largely heightened by well adjusting their energy level and active sites. Herein, the amorphous iron cobalt molybdenum carbonate hydroxide core-shell microspheres (FeCoMo/CoMo) offer significant opportunities to improve the OER activity in both thermodn. and kinetics due to the appropriate matching of the energy level with the equilibrium potential of OER and the abundant active sites.The well-designed Fe0.25-CoMoCH/NF sample exhibits prominent activity toward OER with an overpotential as low as 232 mV to deliver a c.d. of 10 mA cm-2, a small Tafel slope of 46 mV dec-1, and excellent stability in alk. solution Mechanistic studies using a rotating ring-disk electrode confirm the four-electron pathway with high faradaic efficiency (97.7%) toward OER. This research provides a model system so as to tune the inherent catalytic activity of electrocatalysts.
The article 《The Energy Level Regulation of CoMo Carbonate Hydroxide for the Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction Activity》 also mentions many details about this compound(17524-05-9)Category: nitriles-buliding-blocks, you can pay attention to it, because details determine success or failure
Reference:
Nitrile – Wikipedia,
Nitriles – Chemistry LibreTexts