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Hydrogen-assisted scalable preparation of ultrathin Pt shells onto surfactant-free and uniform Pd nanoparticles for highly efficient oxygen reduction reaction in practical fuel cells
- Source :
- Nano Research. 15:1892-1900
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Concentrating active Pt atoms in the outer layers of electrocatalysts is a very effective approach to greatly reduce the Pt loading without compromising the electrocatalytic performance and the total electrochemically active surface area (ECSA) for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in hydrogen-based proton-exchange membrane fuel cells. Accordingly, a facile, low-cost, and hydrogen-assisted two-step method is developed in this work, to massively prepare carbon-supported uniform, small-sized, and surfactant-free Pd nanoparticles (NPs) with ultrathin ∼3-atomic-layer Pt shells (Pd@Pt3L NPs/C). Comprehensive physicochemical characterizations, electrochemical analyses, fuel cell tests, and density functional theory calculations reveal that, benefiting from the ultrathin Pt-shell nanostructure as well as the resulting ligand and geometric effects, Pd@Pt3L NPs/C exhibits not only significantly enhanced ECSA, electrocatalytic activity, and noble-metal (NM) utilization compared to commercial Pt/C, showing 81.24 m2/gPt, 0.710 mA/cm2, and 352/577 mA/mgNM/Pt in ECSA, area-, and NM-/Pt-mass-specific activity, respectively; but also a much better electrochemical stability during the 10,000-cycle accelerated degradation test. More importantly, the corresponding 25-cm2 H2-air/O2 fuel cell with the low cathodic Pt loading of ∼ 0.152 mgPt/cm2geo achieves the high power density of 0.962/1.261 W/cm2geo at the current density of only 1,600 mA/cm2geo, which is much higher than that for the commercial Pt/C. This work not only develops a high-performance and practical Pt-based ORR electrocatalyst, but also provides a scalable preparation method for fabricating the ultrathin Pt-shell nanostructure, which can be further expanded to other metal shells for other energy-conversion applications.
- Subjects :
- Nanostructure
Materials science
Hydrogen
chemistry.chemical_element
Proton exchange membrane fuel cell
Condensed Matter Physics
Electrocatalyst
Electrochemistry
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Membrane
chemistry
Chemical engineering
General Materials Science
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Platinum
Palladium
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19980000 and 19980124
- Volume :
- 15
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nano Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........942a5c55ebcb9107f07205cf7a0daac0