Abstract

Interest is growing in applying fuel cells to heavy duty transportation applications, which requires the fuel cell design to prioritize efficiency and durability to provide a low lifetime cost of ownership. This motivates further development of catalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), as ORR kinetics are a key factor in fuel cell efficiency and catalyst degradation is a major factor limiting lifetime. Pt-alloy catalysts have seen success in light-duty fuel cell applications, where they provide enhanced activity believed to originate (at least in part) from strain of the active Pt surface by the underlying Pt-alloy core. Concerns remain regarding the viability of PtCo catalysts for heavy duty applications, as they may not sustain their activity advantage over extended lifetimes and leaching of the base metal can lead to additional performance degradation. These concerns motivate investigation into the fundamental mechanisms of strain-induced activity enhancements to guide further catalyst development and understand the ultimate limits for the performance and stability of PtCo catalysts. However, practical Pt-alloy fuel cell catalysts are complex, and understanding of real strain effects in these systems remains elusive.Here we will present an investigation into strain effects in Pt-Co ORR catalysts for fuel cells, combining scanning nanobeam electron diffraction (NBED), continuum elastic strain modelling, and full-cell electrochemistry measurements. We leverage recent developments in NBED to make high-throughput strain maps in heterogeneous, carbon-supported PtCo catalysts and identify different mechanisms of strain relaxation, including dislocations and geometric effects. Supported by continuum elastic modelling, we correlate shell thickness, strain state, and activity of PtCo catalysts. Finally, we will comment on how these results provide rational guidance to optimize stable, efficient Pt-alloy catalysts.

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