Sulfur-Stabilizing Ultrafine High-Entropy Alloy Nanoparticles on MXene for Highly Efficient Ethanol Electrooxidation
Wei Peng, Ying‐Rui Lu, Haiping Lin, Ming Peng, Ting‐Shan Chan, Anlian Pan, Yongwen Tan
Abstract
High-entropy alloys (HEAs) are significantly promising candidates for heterogeneous catalysis, yet the controllable synthesis of ultrafine HEA nanoparticles (NPs) remains a formidable challenge due to severe thermal sintering during the high-temperature fabrication process. Herein, we report a sulfur-stabilizing strategy to construct ultrafine HEA NPs with an average diameter of 4.02 nm supported on sulfur-modified Ti 3 C 2 T x (S–Ti 3 C 2 T x ) MXene, on which the strong interfacial metal–sulfur interactions between HEA NPs and the S–Ti 3 C 2 T x supports significantly increase the interfacial adhesion strength, thus greatly suppressing nanoparticle sintering by retarding both particle migration and metal atom diffusion. The representative quinary PtPdCuNiCo HEA–S–Ti 3 C 2 T x exhibits excellent catalytic performance toward alkaline ethanol oxidation reaction (EOR) with an ultrahigh mass activity of 7.03 A mg Pt+Pd –1, which is 4.34 and 5.17 times higher than those of the commercial Pt/C and Pd/C catalysts, respectively. In situ attenuated total reflection–infrared spectroscopy studies reveal that the high intrinsic catalytic activity for the EOR can be ascribed to the synergy of different catalytically active sites of HEA NPs and the well-designed interfacial metal–sulfur interactions.