Abstract

In the present paper, we report the importance of controlling the heat-treatment temperature, the factor that determines the fine structure (core–shell structure or alloy-phase structure) of PdCo bimetallic electrocatalysts. The dependence of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity of bimetallic PdxCo100−x nanoparticles on the various heat-treatment conditions employed in the preparation process has been investigated. Precise Rietveld refinements of high-resolution powder diffraction data and the fine structure parameters simulated using the extended X-ray absorption fine structure data reveal the following. At a heat-treatment temperature of 300°C, a phase-segregated PdCo core–shell structure (Pd shell on a Co core) is formed, while at higher temperatures (above 500°C), a PdCo alloy phase is formed and the core–shell structure is destroyed. The samples for which the core–shell structure had a high-compressive strain lattice structure with a Pd-rich phase caused a downshift of the d-band center, and eventually, the ORR activity of these samples was better than that of the alloy-phase samples formed by high-temperature heat treatment. Hence, the heat-treatment temperature is the most important factor to be considered in the design of PdCo alloy electrocatalysts.

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