Abstract

The effect of residual oxygen species in as-prepared Pt nanoparticle on partially reduced graphene oxide (Pt/PRGO) and partially reduced carboxylated-GO (Pt/PR(GO–COOH)) supports was investigated using electrochemical CO stripping and density functional theory (DFT) analysis. Pt/PRGO and Pt/PR(GO–COOH) revealed a clear negative shift in CO-stripping onset potential compared to commercial Pt/carbon black. DFT analysis confirmed that the presence of a −COOH group provides the most resistance for CO adsorption. This CO-Pt binding energy is significantly lower than that observed in the presence of an −OH group, which is the most abundant oxygen group in carbon supports. The Pt-CO dissociation energies (on a 42-atom graphene sheet) in the presence of various oxygen groups, in descending order, were OH > C═O ≈ C–O–C > COOH. Although single-bonded carbon–oxygen groups (−OH and C–O–C) are more abundant on the GO basal plane and play an important role in Pt nanoparticle nucleation and distribution on graphene sheets, the double-bonded carbon–oxygen (C═O and COOH) groups are more abundant residual species post Pt nanoparticle growth and play a vital role in enhancing CO tolerance.

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