Back to Search Start Over

Tuning lattice strain in biphenylene for enhanced electrocatalytic oxygen reduction reaction in proton exchange membrane fuel cells.

Authors :
Feng, Zhen
Fang, Miaomiao
Li, Renyi
Ma, Bingxin
Wang, Huimin
Ding, Hai
Su, Guang
Tao, Kai
Tang, Yanan
Dai, Xianqi
Source :
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy. Oct2022, Vol. 47 Issue 85, p36294-36305. 12p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

As proton-exchange membrane fuel cell technology has grown and developed, there has been increasing demand for the design of novel catalyst architectures to achieve high power density and realize wide commercialization. Herein, based on the two-dimensional biphenylene, we compare the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity on the active sites with different biaxial lattice strains using first-principles calculations. The ORR free energy diagrams of biphenylene monolayers with varying lattice strains suggest that the biaxial tensile strains are unfavorable for catalytic activity. In contrast, the biaxial compressive strains could improve the catalytic performance. The biphenylene systems with the strain of −2% ∼ −6% (S -0.02∼-0.06) display overpotentials of 0.37–0.49 V. This performance is comparable to or better than the Pt (111) surface. The Bader charge transfer of adsorbed O species on various biaxial strain biphenylene catalysts could be a describer to examine the catalytic activity. The catalysts possessed the moderate transferred charge of O adsorbed species often promotes catalytic process and give the high catalysis efficiency. Overall, this work suggests that the lattice strain strategy can significantly enhance the catalytic activity of biphenylene materials and further provide guidance to design biphenylene-based catalysts in various chemical reactions. [Display omitted] • Lattice strains in 2D biphenylene could enhance ORR activity. • Compressive strains of −2% ∼ −6% endow their overpotentials of 0.37–0.49 V. • Charge transfer of adsorbed O species is a descriptor to examine ORR performance. • Moderate strains and moderate transferred charge lead to excellent efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03603199
Volume :
47
Issue :
85
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159907455
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2022.08.200