Understanding Pt Active Sites on Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Nanocages for Industrial Hydrogen Evolution with Ultralow Pt Usage
Jingyi Tian, Minqi Xia, Xueyi Cheng, Chenghui Mao, Yiqun Chen, Yan Zhang, Changkai Zhou, Fengfei Xu, Lijun Yang, Xizhang Wang, Qiang Wu, Zheng Hu
Abstract
Engineering microstructures of Pt and understanding the related catalytic mechanism are critical to optimizing the performance for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Herein, Pt dispersion and coordination are precisely regulated on hierarchical nitrogen-doped carbon nanocages (hNCNCs) by a thermal-driven Pt migration, from edge-hosted Pt–N 2 Cl 2 single sites in the initial Pt 1 /hNCNC-70 °C catalyst to Pt clusters/nanoparticles and back to in-plane Pt–N x C 4– x single sites. Thereinto, Pt–N 2 Cl 2 presents the optimal HER activity (6 mV@10 mA cm –2 ) while Pt–N x C 4– x shows poor HER activity (321 mV@10 mA cm –2 ) due to their different Pt coordination. Operando characterizations demonstrate that the low-coordinated Pt–N 2 intermediates derived from Pt–N 2 Cl 2 under the working condition are the real active sites for HER, which enable the multi-H adsorption mechanism with an ideal H* adsorption energy of nearly 0 eV, thereby the high activity, as revealed by theoretical calculations. In contrast, the high-coordinated Pt–N x C 4– x sites only allow the single-H adsorption with a positive adsorption energy and thereby the low HER activity. Accordingly, with an ultralow Pt loading of only 25 μg Pt cm –2, the proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer assembled using Pt 1 /hNCNC-70 °C as the cathodic catalyst achieves an industrial-level current density of 1.0 A cm –2 at a low cell voltage of 1.66 V and high durability, showing great potential applications.