4.8 Article

Elucidating Hydrogen Oxidation/Evolution Kinetics in Base and Acid by Enhanced Activities at the Optimized Pt Shell Thickness on the Ru Core

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 5, Issue 11, Pages 6764-6772

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.5b01670

Keywords

HOR; HER; alkaline fuel cells; water electrolysis; Ru@Pt core-shell

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences and Biosciences Division [DE-SC0012704]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) under the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships Program (SULI)
  4. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [2015265]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of China [21336003]
  6. Major Basic Research Program of China [2014CB239703]
  7. China Scholarship Council

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Hydrogen oxidation and evolution on Pt in acid are facile processes, while in alkaline electrolytes, they are 2 orders of magnitude slower. Thus, developing catalysts that are more active than Pt for these two reactions is important for advancing the performance of anion exchange membrane fuel cells and water electrolyzers. Herein, we detail a 4-fold enhancement of Pt mass activity that we achieved using single-crystalline Ru@Pt core-shell nanoparticles with two-monolayer-thick Pt shells, which doubles the activity on Pt-Ru alloy nanocatalysts. For Pt specific activity, the two- and one-monolayer-thick Pt shells exhibited enhancement factors of 3.1 and 2.3, respectively, compared to the Pt nanocatalysts in base, differing considerably from the values of 1 and 0.4, respectively, in acid. To explain such behavior and the orders of magnitude difference in activity on going from acid to base, we performed kinetic analyses of polarization curves over a wide range of potential from -250 to 250 mV using the dual-pathway kinetic equation. From acid to base, the activation free energies increase the most for the Volmer reaction, resulting in a switch of the rate-determining step from the Tafel to the Volmer reaction, and a shift to a weaker optimal hydrogen binding energy. The much higher activation barrier for the Volmer reaction in base than in acid is ascribed to one or both of the two catalyst-insensitive factors: slower transport of OH- than H+ in water and a stronger O-H bond in water molecules (HO-H) than in hydrated protons (H2O-H+).

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