Journal Article FZJ-2019-01095

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Concave curvature facets benefit oxygen electroreduction catalysis on octahedral shaped PtNi nanocatalysts

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2019
RSC72819 London

Journal of materials chemistry / A Materials for energy and sustainability A 7(3), 1149 - 1159 () [10.1039/C8TA11298C]

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Abstract: Studies that demonstrated enhanced electrocatalytic oxygen reduction activities of octahedral PtNi nanocatalysts have routinely motivated and explained their data by the structure-sensitivity of PtNi alloy surfaces in general, more specifically by the favourable performance of the annealed Pt3Ni(111) single crystal surface with a monoatomic Pt skin, in particular. In this contribution, we challenge this view and show that imperfect Ni-enriched {111} nanofacets with concave Pt curvature catalytically outperform flat, well-alloyed, locally ordered {111} and {100} nanofacets in cuboctahedral nanoparticles. To achieve this, we investigate the geometric, compositional, and morphological structure on the ensemble and on the individual particle level of PtNi alloy nano-octahedra. In particular, we track the correlations of these parameters after thermal annealing and link them to their catalytic activity. The level of local compositional and structural disorder appears to be a reliable descriptor and predictor for ORR activity – at least within a family of catalysts. After annealing up to 300 °C, concave Pt {111} facets, with partially flat Ni facets, remained most prevalent, resulting in nanoparticles with pronounced elemental anisotropy. At higher annealing temperature, concave Pt morphologies gave way to cuboctahedra with healed flat {111} and {100} alloy facets. The imperfect concave nano-octahedral catalysts with enhanced local disorder invariably outperformed more ordered particles, yet lagged behind in morphological stability. Faceted PtNi nano-cuboctahedra emerging at 400 °C ultimately offered the most reasonable balance between moderately high activity and good morphological stability. This is why we propose these cuboctahedral shaped Pt alloy nanoparticles as promising PEM cathode fuel cell catalyst of choice. While the present results do not invalidate the exceptional oxygen reduction activity of perfect Pt3Ni(111) “skin” single crystal surfaces, they shed new light on the decade old puzzle about structure–activity relationships of PtNi octahedral nanocrystals.

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Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Mikrostrukturforschung (PGI-5)
Research Program(s):
  1. 143 - Controlling Configuration-Based Phenomena (POF3-143) (POF3-143)
  2. DFG project 257727131 - Nanoskalige Pt Legierungselektrokatalysatoren mit definierter Morphologie: Synthese, Electrochemische Analyse, und ex-situ/in-situ Transmissionselektronenmikroskopische (TEM) Studien (257727131) (257727131)

Appears in the scientific report 2019
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Medline ; Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 ; OpenAccess ; Allianz-Lizenz / DFG ; Clarivate Analytics Master Journal List ; Current Contents - Engineering, Computing and Technology ; Current Contents - Physical, Chemical and Earth Sciences ; IF >= 5 ; JCR ; National-Konsortium ; SCOPUS ; Science Citation Index ; Science Citation Index Expanded ; Web of Science Core Collection
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Document types > Articles > Journal Article
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Institute Collections > PGI > PGI-5
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 Record created 2019-01-31, last modified 2024-06-10