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Trends in Formic Acid Electro-Oxidation on Transition Metals Alloyed with Platinum and Palladium

Ahmed O. Elnabawy, Ellen A. Murray, Manos Mavrikakis

2022The Journal of Physical Chemistry C25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Direct formic acid fuel cells (DFAFCs) have emerged as a promising power source to meet increased demands for alternative energy sources in the transportation and portable energy storage sectors. Furthermore, these fuel cells utilize formic acid (FA), a nontoxic and carbon-neutral fuel when produced from biomass or via CO<sub>2</sub> reduction. Despite the promise of DFAFCs, the best monometallic catalysts, platinum and palladium, are poisoned by CO through the indirect oxidation pathway and require large overpotentials. By alloying Pt and Pd with other metals, we aim to improve both the activity and selectivity of these catalysts. Here, we present a systematic density functional theory (GGA-PW91) study of FA electro-oxidation (FAO) on the (111) facet of bimetallic Pt (Pt<sub>3</sub>M) or Pd (Pd<sub>3</sub>M) catalysts (M = Au, Ag, Cu, Pt, Pd, Ir, Rh, Ru, or Re) to evaluate the catalytic performance of these surfaces. For each surface, we calculate free energy diagrams and onset potentials of three key reaction mechanisms: direct oxidation of FA via carboxyl (COOH), direct oxidation of FA via formate (HCOO), and the indirect oxidation of FA that first forms CO en route to full oxidation to CO<sub>2</sub>. We then display the trends in the form of phase diagrams that compare the activity of the calculated surfaces against regions of high activity using the free energies of adsorbed CO and OH as descriptors, enabling high-throughput screening and design of improved catalysts, particularly those alloying Pt or Pd with Ir, Ru, or Re.

Topics & Concepts

Bimetallic stripPalladiumCatalysisPlatinumFormateTransition metalFormic acidChemistryInorganic chemistryAdsorptionSelectivityMaterials sciencePhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsCatalytic Processes in Materials Science
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