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Amorphous nickel boride membrane on a platinum-nickel alloy surface for enhanced oxygen reduction reaction.


ABSTRACT: The low activity of the oxygen reduction reaction in polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells is a major barrier for electrocatalysis, and hence needs to be optimized. Tuning the surface electronic structure of platinum-based bimetallic alloys, a promising oxygen reduction reaction catalyst, plays a key role in controlling its interaction with reactants, and thus affects the efficiency. Here we report that a dealloying process can be utilized to experimentally fabricate the interface between dealloyed platinum-nickel alloy and amorphous nickel boride membrane. The coating membrane works as an electron acceptor to tune the surface electronic structure of the platinum-nickel catalyst, and this composite catalyst composed of crystalline platinum-nickel covered by amorphous nickel boride achieves a 27-times enhancement in mass activity relative to commercial platinum/carbon at 0.9?V for the oxygen reduction reaction performance. Moreover, this interactional effect between a crystalline surface and amorphous membrane can be readily generalized to facilitate the 3-times higher catalytic activity of commercial platinum/carbon.

SUBMITTER: He D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4980487 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Amorphous nickel boride membrane on a platinum-nickel alloy surface for enhanced oxygen reduction reaction.

He Daping D   Zhang Libo L   He Dongsheng D   Zhou Gang G   Lin Yue Y   Deng Zhaoxiang Z   Hong Xun X   Wu Yuen Y   Chen Chen C   Li Yadong Y  

Nature communications 20160809


The low activity of the oxygen reduction reaction in polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells is a major barrier for electrocatalysis, and hence needs to be optimized. Tuning the surface electronic structure of platinum-based bimetallic alloys, a promising oxygen reduction reaction catalyst, plays a key role in controlling its interaction with reactants, and thus affects the efficiency. Here we report that a dealloying process can be utilized to experimentally fabricate the interface between deal  ...[more]

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