4.4 Article

Reactivity descriptors for direct methanol fuel cell anode catalysts

Journal

SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 602, Issue 21, Pages 3424-3431

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.susc.2008.08.011

Keywords

Methanol; Transition metals; DFT; Electrocatalysis

Funding

  1. Department of Energy
  2. Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-06CHI 1357]
  3. National - 1.0 Science Foundation
  4. University of Wisconsin
  5. Lundbeck foundation

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We have investigated the anode reaction in direct methanol fuel cells using a database of adsorption free energies for 16 intermediates on 12 close-packed transition metal surfaces calculated with periodic, self-consistent, density functional theory (DFT-GGA). This database, combined with a simple electrokinetic model of the methanol electrooxidation reaction, yields mechanistic insights that are consistent with previous experimental and theoretical studies on Pt, and extends these insights to a broad spectrum of other transition metals. In addition, by using linear scaling relations between the adsorption free energies of various intermediates in the reaction network, we find that the results determined with the full database of adsorption energies can be estimated by knowing only two key descriptors for each metal surface: the free energies of OH and CO on the surface. Two mechanisms for methanol oxidation to CO2 are investigated: an indirect mechanism that goes through a CO intermediate and a direct mechanism where methanol is oxidized to CO2 without the formation of a CO intermediate. For the direct mechanism, we find that, because of CO poisoning, only a small current will result on all non-group 11 transition metals; of these metals, Pt is predicted to be the most active, For methanol decomposition via the indirect mechanism, we find that the onset potential is limited either by the ability to activate methanol, by the ability to activate water, or by surface poisoning by CO center dot or OH center dot/O-center dot. Among pure metals, there is no obvious candidate for a good anode catalyst, and in order to design a better catalyst, one has to look for bi-functional surfaces such as the well-studied PtRu alloy. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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