4.8 Article

Noble Metal-Free Hydrazine Fuel Cell Catalysts: EPOC Effect in Competing Chemical and Electrochemical Reaction Pathways

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 133, Issue 14, Pages 5425-5431

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja111160r

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Stanford Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC)
  2. Center of excellence (Exzellenzcluster) in catalysis (UNICAT)
  3. German National Science Foundation (DFG)

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We report the discovery of a highly active Ni-Co alloy electrocatalyst for the oxidation of hydrazine (N2H4) and provide evidence for competing electrochemical (faradaic) and chemical (nonfaradaic) reaction pathways. The electrochemical conversion of hydrazine on catalytic surfaces in fuel cells is of great scientific and technological interest, because it offers multiple redox states, complex reaction pathways, and significantly more favorable energy and power densities compared to hydrogen fuel. Structure reactivity relations of a Ni60Co40 alloy electrocatalyst are presented with a 6-fold increase in catalytic N2H4 oxidation activity over today's benchmark catalysts. We further study the mechanistic pathways of the catalytic N2H4 conversion as function of the applied electrode potential using differentially pumped electrochemical mass spectrometry (DEMS). At positive overpotentials, N2H4 is electrooxidized into nitrogen consuming hydroxide ions, which is the fuel cell-relevant faradaic reaction pathway. In parallel, N2H4 decomposes chemically into molecular nitrogen and hydrogen over a broad range of electrode potentials. The electroless chemical decomposition rate was controlled by the electrode potential, suggesting a rare example of a liquid-phase electrochemical promotion effect of a chemical catalytic reaction (EPOC). The coexisting electrocatalytic (faradaic) and heterogeneous catalytic (electroless, nonfaradaic) reaction pathways have important implications for the efficiency of hydrazine fuel cells.

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