4.8 Article

Proton exchange membrane fuel cells powered with both CO and H2

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2107332118

Keywords

fuel cell; hydrogen oxidation reaction; antipoisoning; single atomic sites synergy

Funding

  1. National Science and Technology Major Project [2017YFB0102905]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21875243, 21633008, 21673221, U1601211]
  3. Jilin Province Science and Technology Development Program [20200201001JC, 20190201270JC, 20180101030JC]

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This study introduces a novel atomically dispersed IrRu-N-C anode catalyst that shows excellent performance in H-2 fuel cells and can oxidize both CO and H-2 simultaneously. Experimental results indicate that this catalyst significantly outperforms traditional Pt/C catalysts and has the potential to address the CO poisoning issue in PEMFCs.
The CO electrooxidation is long considered invincible in the proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC), where even a trace level of CO in H-2 seriously poisons the anode catalysts and leads to huge performance decay. Here, we describe a class of atomically dispersed IrRu-N-C anode catalysts capable of oxidizing CO, H-2, or a combination of the two. With a small amount of metal (24 mu g(metal).cm(-2)) used in the anode, the H-2 fuel cell performs its peak power density at 1.43 W.cm(-2). When operating with pure CO, this catalyst exhibits its maximum current density at 800 mA.cm(-2), while the Pt/C-based cell ceases to work. We attribute this exceptional catalytic behavior to the interplay between Ir and Ru single-atom centers, where the two sites act in synergy to favorably decompose H2O and to further facilitate CO activation. These findings open up an avenue to conquer the formidable poisoning issue of PEMFCs.

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