Litcius/Paper detail

High-Loading Pt–Co/C Catalyst with Enhanced Durability toward the Oxygen Reduction Reaction through Surface Au Modification

Feng Wang, Qi Zhang, Zhiyan Rui, Jia Li, Jianguo Liu

2020ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces57 citationsDOI

Abstract

Carbon-supported Pt-Co (Pt-Co/C) nanoparticles with a high Pt loading are regarded as promising cathode catalysts for practical applications of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). Unfortunately, with high loading, it is difficult to improve the catalytic durability while maintaining the particle size between 2 and 5 nm to ensure the initial catalytic activity. Thus, it is of great significance to prepare high-loading Pt-Co/C catalysts with enhanced activity and durability. Herein, we proposed an efficient way to prepare high-Pt-loading (>50 wt %) Pt-Co/C catalysts without using any further surfactants. Furthermore, due to the one-step selective acid etching and surface Au modification, the as-prepared catalysts only need to undergo thermal treatment at as low as 150 °C to achieve a surface structure rich of Pt and Au. The average particle size of the as-prepared Au-Pt-Co/C-0.015 is 3.42 nm, and the Pt loading of it is up to 50.2 wt %. The atomic ratio of Pt, Co, and Au is 94:5:1. The mass activity (MA) is nearly 1.9 times that of Pt/C (60 wt %, JM) and the specific activity is also improved. The MA loss after the 30,000-cycle accelerated degradation test (ADT) is only 9.4%. The remarkable durability is mainly due to the surface Au modification, which can restrict the dissolution of Pt and Co. This research provides an effective synthesis strategy to prepare high-loading carbon-supported Pt-based catalysts beneficial to practical PEMFC applications.

Topics & Concepts

CatalysisMaterials scienceDurabilityDissolutionProton exchange membrane fuel cellChemical engineeringSurface modificationNanoparticleParticle sizeCathodeCarbon fibersNanotechnologyComposite materialChemistryOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryEngineeringComposite numberElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionFuel Cells and Related MaterialsAdvanced battery technologies research