Abstract

Renewable power-derived green hydrogen distributed via natural gas networks is considered one of the viable routes to drive the decarbonization of transportation and distributed power generation, while a trace amount of sulfur impurities is one of the key factors that affect the durability and life cycle expense of proton-exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) for end users. Herein, we explore the underlying effect of sulfur resistance for Pt-based hydrogen oxidation reaction (HOR) electrocatalysts devoted to high-performance and durable PEMFCs. Two typical electrocatalysts, Pt/C with pure Pt nanoparticles (NPs) and PtCo/C with Pt3Co-alloy-core-Pt-skin NPs, were investigated to demonstrate the structure-property relation for Pt-based electrocatalysts. It was revealed that the PtCo/C demonstrated alleviated sulfur poisoning with the adsorption rate constant reduced by 21.7% compared with Pt/C, and the desorption of the adsorbed sulfur was also more favorable with Pt-S bond decomposition temperature lowered by approximately 25 °C. Characterization indicated that sulfur was predominantly adsorbed in the edge mode for PtCo/C, but in a comparable edge and bridge mode for Pt/C, which caused the strengthened Pt-S binding by the chelation effect for Pt/C. The lowered d-band center of surface Pt for PtCo/C, tuned by electron transfer from Co to Pt and Pt lattice strain, was also found responsible for the weakened Pt-S interaction. The recovery test based on electro-oxidation suggested that PtCo/C also outperformed Pt/C with faster and more thorough release of HOR active sites. The SO42- species derived from electro-oxidation of S2- was more apt to adsorb on Pt/C than PtCo/C because of its stronger affinity to SO42- caused by the higher d-band center of Pt. Therefore, it is clarified that adequate modification of the Pt d-band center, for example, negatively tuned for the state-of-the-art Pt/C, is crucial to improve the sulfur resistance and recovery capability for Pt-based electrocatalysts while reserving comparable HOR activity. In particular, the investigated PtCo/C electrocatalyst is a better choice over Pt/C for more durable PEMFC anodes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call