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Electrocatalytic methanol oxidation over Cu, Ni and bimetallic Cu-Ni nanoparticles supported on graphitic carbon nitride

Authors :
Marcin Pisarek
Izabela S. Pieta
Radek Zboril
Manoj B. Gawande
Robert Nowakowski
Anuj K. Rathi
Marcin Holdynski
Piotr Pieta
Agnieszka Kamińska
Source :
Applied Catalysis B: Environmental. 244:272-283
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Ni, Cu and Cu–Ni nanostructures have been fabricated and homogeneously embedded on ultrathin two-dimensional (2D) carbon nitride (g-C3N4), and the surface morphology and composition of the resulting hybrid nanostructures were studied by XRD, TEM, HRTEM-elemental mapping, Raman spectroscopy and XPS. The new hierarchical hetero-structures dropcasted on GC anodes have been visualised by SEM and their catalytic performance have been examined in methanol electrooxidation reaction (MOR) under alkaline conditions. Nanosized Ni particles dispersed finely over g-C3N4 are very active electrocatalysts with MOR onset at potential 0.35 V and charge transfer resistance 0.12 kΩ. The stability of modyfied GC electrodes, examined under chronoamperometric conditions showed that for electrode loading with 4% (wt. %) of NiO the stable current density ca. 36 A g−1 (12 A cm2) was obtained during whole experiment (up to 160 min). For all catalyst studied the curent density obtained during MOR reaction was enhanced when electrode was iluminated by UV light λ∼400 nm, and the highest value were obtained for 4% Ni/CN catalyst ca. 127 A g−1 (22 A cm2). The Cu incorporation in the hybrid material evoke loss of activity mostly due to Cu+ irreversible reduction/oxidation to Cu° and Cu2+, CuO segregation and influencing electron transfer process which results in the increasing in the redox potential. These results represent an important step towards light-enhanced electro-reactive systems and sensors in which heterojunction formation can facilitate electron-hole separation and enable more efficient energy transfer.

Details

ISSN :
09263373
Volume :
244
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e57f27fca44ad5090156ca61c3f451fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2018.10.072