4.8 Article

Subnanoscale Platinum by Repeated UV Irradiation: From One and Few Atoms to Clusters for the Automotive PEMFC

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages 8395-8404

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c20935

Keywords

Pt clusters; repeated UV light; finite size effect; oxygen reduction reaction; electrocatalytic activity

Funding

  1. Natural Science Funds of China [51872020]

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This study demonstrates the preparation of atomically precise platinum with scalable atoms ranging from 1 to 43, showing higher oxygen reduction reaction performance and utilization rate of platinum. The method may reduce the amount of platinum required for PEMFCs, opening up new horizons in designing efficient PGM catalysts.
The unaffordable costs of the automotive proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC), remaining a roadblock for commercial applications as an alternative to combustion engine vehicles, can be overcome partially by remarkably increasing the utilization of irreplaceable platinum (Pt). Herein, atomically precise Pt with scalable atoms ranging from 1 to 43 atoms, stabilized by a homemade carbon from white radish without any ligands, is prepared by a repeated UV irradiation method that is industrially scalable. Compared with the isolated Pt-1 in the form of Pt-N-4, octahedral Pt-6, and icosahedron Pt-13, the ordered Pt-43 cluster (similar to 0.75 nm) with higher metal coordination number displays much higher oxygen reduction reaction performance with a mass activity, which is about 1036% higher than that obtained by state-of-the-art Pt/C, an increase by a factor of similar to 3.3 as compared with the DOE 2020 target (0.44 A mg(Pt)(-1)). The utilization rate of Pt atoms reaches up to 94.7%, much higher than that of Pt (2 nm, 56%), capable of further reducing the amount of platinum that is required for PEMFCs. Moreover, the cluster exhibits an outstanding stability due to the improved Pt vacancy formation energy raised by stronger atom interaction in the close-packed cluster. The cluster exhibits a unique finite size effect from self-tuned energy band and strain levels. A clear strain effect on the d-band center is first presented for pure Pt without distortion from ligands like a second metal. Therefore, the assembly of subnanometer Pt with atom alteration opens up new horizons in designing efficient platinum group metal (PGM) catalysts by reducing the size to subnanometer scale.

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