Journal Article FZJ-2018-00779

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Tuning the Electrocatalytic Oxygen Reduction Reaction Activity and Stability of Shape-Controlled Pt–Ni Nanoparticles by Thermal Annealing − Elucidating the Surface Atomic Structural and Compositional Changes

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2017
American Chemical Society Washington, DC

Journal of the American Chemical Society 139(46), 16536 - 16547 () [10.1021/jacs.7b06846]

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Abstract: Shape-controlled octahedral Pt–Ni alloy nanoparticles exhibit remarkably high activities for the electroreduction of molecular oxygen (oxygen reduction reaction, ORR), which makes them fuel-cell cathode catalysts with exceptional potential. To unfold their full and optimized catalytic activity and stability, however, the nano-octahedra require post-synthesis thermal treatments, which alter the surface atomic structure and composition of the crystal facets. Here, we address and strive to elucidate the underlying surface chemical processes using a combination of ex situ analytical techniques with in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM), in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD), and in situ electrochemical Fourier transformed infrared (FTIR) experiments. We present a robust fundamental correlation between annealing temperature and catalytic activity, where a ∼25 times higher ORR activity than for commercial Pt/C (2.7 A mgPt–1 at 0.9 VRHE) was reproducibly observed upon annealing at 300 °C. The electrochemical stability, however, peaked out at the most severe heat treatments at 500 °C. Aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) in combination with in situ electrochemical CO stripping/FTIR data revealed subtle, but important, differences in the formation and chemical nature of Pt-rich and Ni-rich surface domains in the octahedral (111) facets. Estimating trends in surface chemisorption energies from in situ electrochemical CO/FTIR investigations suggested that balanced annealing generates an optimal degree of Pt surface enrichment, while the others exhibited mostly Ni-rich facets. The insights from our study are quite generally valid and aid in developing suitable post-synthesis thermal treatments for other alloy nanocatalysts as well.

Classification:

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Physik Nanoskaliger Systeme (ER-C-1)
  2. Mikrostrukturforschung (PGI-5)
  3. Elektrochemische Verfahrenstechnik (IEK-3)
Research Program(s):
  1. 143 - Controlling Configuration-Based Phenomena (POF3-143) (POF3-143)

Appears in the scientific report 2017
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Document types > Articles > Journal Article
Institute Collections > ER-C > ER-C-1
Institute Collections > ICE > ICE-2
Institute Collections > PGI > PGI-5
Workflow collections > Public records
IEK > IEK-3
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 Record created 2018-01-24, last modified 2024-07-11


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