4.8 Article

Ultrasonically Surface-Activated Nickel Foam as a Highly Efficient Monolith Electrode for the Catalytic Oxidation of Methanol to Formate

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 26, Pages 30603-30613

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c06258

Keywords

methanol oxidation reaction; electrocatalysis; formate generation; OER masking; monolith electrode

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21722406, 21975240]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [WK2060190102]
  3. TWAS [2016-171]
  4. Chinese Academy of Science (CAS)

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A new nickel-based catalyst was developed for efficient methanol oxidation to form formic acid at a lower oxidation potential. This catalyst also efficiently prevents CO poisoning and maintains stable activity at high current densities.
Most of the current electrocatalysts for the methanol oxidation reaction are precious group metals such as Pt, Pd, and Ru. However, their use is limited due to their high cost, scarcity, and issues with carbon monoxide poisoning. We developed a simple method to prepare a nickel foam (NF)-based monolith electrode with a NiO nanosheet array structure as an efficient electrocatalyst toward the oxidation of methanol to produce formate. By a simple ultrasonic acid treatment and air oxidation at room temperature, an inert NF was converted to NiO/NF as a catalytically active electrode due to the uniform NiO nanosheet array that was rapidly formed on the surface of NiO/NF. In alkaline electrolytes containing methanol, the as-prepared NiO/NF catalysts exhibited a lower methanol oxidation reaction (MOR) potential of +1.53 V vs RHE at 100 mA cm(-2) compared to that of inert NF samples. The difference in potentials between the E-MOR and the E-OER at that current density was found to be 280 mV, indicating that methanol oxidation occurred at lower potentials as compared to the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). We also observed that the NiO/NF could also efficiently catalyze the oxidation of CO without being poisoned by it. NiO/NF retained close to 100% of its initial activity after 20,000 s of methanol oxidation tests at high current densities above 200 mA cm(-2). Because of the simple synthesis method and the enhanced catalytic performance and stability of NiO/NF, this allows methanol to be used as an OER masking agent for the energy-efficient generation of value-added products such as formic acid and hydrogen.

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