Abstract
Alloy catalysts such as Pt-M (M: other metal elements) have been extensively developed to improve the sluggish oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) that limits the efficiencies of fuel cells and metal-air batteries. Their catalytic activity is potentially enhanced by strain induced in a nearly pure Pt "shell" formed by dissolving the alloyed metal (M) from the surface. It is, therefore, of great importance to reveal the strain distribution on the Pt shell in situ so that we can exploit this mechanism to design new alloy catalysts. Yet, it has been challenging to analyze the strain on the shell because it inevitably requires a technique that can image the strain field of the nanoparticles with high spatial resolution.In this study,1 we successfully revealed the strain of the exemplary Pt-Ni alloy nanoparticles in detail from the 3D images obtained by using a novel synchrotron technique, “Bragg Coherent X-ray Diffraction Imaging” (BCDI), which can directly image minute atomic displacement field owing to the X-ray coherence. Pt-Ni nanoparticles with compositions of Pt2Ni3 (Ni rich), Pt1Ni1 (moderate Ni), and Pt3Ni2 (Ni poor) were observed by BCDI during cyclic voltammetry cycles, in which the less noble metal Ni electrochemically leached from the alloy. This cycling induced tensile strain inside particles in all the compositions, implying that the formation of a Pt shell on the surface strained the core of the particle because of the lattice mismatch between the Pt-Ni alloys and Pt. The strain in the shell was evaluated from a core-shell elastic model using the parameters obtained in the 3D images.A compressive circumferential strain in the shell was observed in all the compositions, and the Pt1Ni1 particle showed the largest compressive circumferential strain of 5%. Since the compressive strain is reported to facilitate the enhanced ORR,2 the compositional dependence of the strain magnitude observed in this study was in excellent agreement with the previous study performed with nm-size particles where Pt1Ni1 exhibits the highest activity among a wide range of compositions.3 A similar strain-activity relation was also inferred in a powder X-ray diffraction studies of core-shell Pt x Co1-x alloys,4 suggesting it is a widely applicable phenomenon. The present study demonstrated that the strain on alloy nanoparticles can be quantitatively determined by BCDI during electrochemical reactions, which enables us to exploit surface strain in designing a wide range of electrocatalysts. T. Kawaguchi et al., Nano Letters, 21, 5945–5951 (2021).H. Wang et al., Science, 354, 1031–1036 (2016).C. Wang et al., Advanced Functional Materials, 21, 147–152 (2011).D. Wang et al., Nature Materials, 12, 81–87 (2013).
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