Light doping of tungsten into copper-platinum nanoalloys for boosting their electrocatalytic performance in methanol oxidation
Danye Liu, Qing Zeng, Chaoquan Hu, Dong Chen, Hui Liu, Yongsheng Han, Lin Xu, Qingbo Zhang, Jun Yang
Abstract
Coupling the bi-functional mechanism with compressive lattice strain might be an effective way to boost the electrocatalysis of platinum (Pt)-based nanoparticles for methanol oxidation reaction (MOR). This strategy weakens the chemisorption of poisoning CO-like intermediates generated during MOR on the active Pt sites by lowering their d-band center. In this context, we herein report the synthesis of ternary copper-tungsten-platinum (CuWPt) nanoalloys with light doping of W element by simply co-reducing their precursors at elevated temperature. In this ternary alloy system, the presence of only small amount of W element not only weakens the chemisorption of CO-like intermediates by lowering the Pt d-band center through compressive lattice strain, but also cleans the active Pt sites by "hydrogen spillover effect", endowing the as-prepared CuWPt nanoalloys at an appropriate Cu/W/Pt ratio with good activity for MOR. In specific, the ternary CuWPt alloy nanoparticles at a Cu/W/Pt molar ratio of 21/4/75 show a specific activity of 2.5 mA·cm<sup>−2</sup> and a mass activity of 2.11 A·mg<sup>−1</sup> with a better durability, outperforming those ternary CuWPt alloy nanoparticles at other Cu/W/Pt ratios, binary CuPt alloys and commercial Pt/C catalyst as well as a large number of reported Pt-based electrocatalysts. In addition, a single direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) assembled using ternary CuWPt nanoalloys as anodic catalysts shows a power density of 24.3 mW·cm<sup>−2</sup> and an open-circle voltage of 0.6 V, also much higher than those of the single DMFC assembled from commercial Pt/C catalysts.