Catalysis Sans Catalyst Loss: The Origins of Prolonged Stability of Graphene–Metal–Graphene Sandwich Architecture for Oxygen Reduction Reactions

Author:

Abdelhafiz Ali1ORCID,Choi Ji Il2,Zhao Bote2,Cho Jinwon2,Ding Yong2,Soule Luke2,Jang Seung Soon2,Liu Meilin2,Alamgir Faisal M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Mass Ave Cambridge, MA 02139 USA

2. School of Materials Science and Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology 771 Ferst Drive Atlanta GA 30332 USA

Abstract

AbstractOver the past decades, the design of active catalysts has been the subject of intense research efforts. However, there has been significantly less deliberate emphasis on rationally designing a catalyst system with a prolonged stability. A major obstacle comes from the ambiguity behind how catalyst degrades. Several degradation mechanisms are proposed in literature,   but with a lack of systematic studies, the causal relations between degradation and those proposed mechanisms remain ambiguous. Here, a systematic study of a catalyst system comprising of small particles and single atoms of Pt sandwiched between graphene layers, GR/Pt/GR, is studied to  unravel the degradation mechanism of the studied electrocatalyst for oxygen reduction reaction(ORR). Catalyst suffers from atomic dissolution under ORR harsh acidic and oxidizing operation voltages. Single atoms trapped in point defects within the top graphene layer on their way hopping through toward the surface of GR/Pt/GR architecture. Trapping mechanism renders individual Pt atoms as single atom catalyst sites catalyzing ORR for thousands of cycles before washed away in the electrolyte. The GR/Pt/GR catalysts also compare favorably to state‐of‐the‐art commercial Pt/C catalysts and demonstrates a rational design of a hybrid nanoarchitecture with a prolonged stability for thousands of operation cycles.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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