Inducing Covalent Atomic Interaction in Intermetallic Pt Alloy Nanocatalysts for High‐Performance Fuel Cells

Author:

Liu Xuan1,Zhao Zhonglong2,Liang Jiashun1,Li Shenzhou1,Lu Gang3,Priest Cameron4,Wang Tanyuan1,Han Jiantao1,Wu Gang4,Wang Xiaoming5,Huang Yunhui1,Li Qing1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Material Processing and Die & Mould Technology, School of Materials Science and Engineering Huazhong University of Science and Technology Wuhan 430074 China

2. School of Physical Science and Technology Inner Mongolia University Hohhot 010021 China

3. Department of Physics and Astronomy California State University Northridge CA 91330 USA

4. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University at Buffalo The State University of New York Buffalo NY 14260 USA

5. Department of Chemistry and Key Laboratory for Preparation and Application of Ordered Structural Materials of Guangdong Province Shantou University Shantou 515063 China

Abstract

AbstractThe harsh working environments of proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) pose huge challenges to the stability of Pt‐based alloy catalysts. The widespread presence of metallic bonds with significantly delocalized electron distribution often lead to component segregation and rapid performance decay. Here we report L10−Pt2CuGa intermetallic nanoparticles with a unique covalent atomic interaction between Pt−Ga as high‐performance PEMFC cathode catalysts. The L10−Pt2CuGa/C catalyst shows superb oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity and stability in fuel cell cathode (mass activity=0.57 A mgPt−1 at 0.9 V, peak power density=2.60/1.24 W cm−2 in H2‐O2/air, 28 mV voltage loss at 0.8 A cm−2 after 30 000 cycles). Theoretical calculations reveal the optimized adsorption of oxygen intermediates via the formed biaxial strain on L10−Pt2CuGa surface, and the durability enhancement stems from the stronger Pt−M bonds than those in L11−PtCu resulted from Pt−Ga covalent interactions.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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