The impact of the carbon structure,
the aging protocol, and the
gas atmosphere on the degradation of Pt/C electrocatalysts were studied
by electrochemical and spectroscopic methods. Pt nanocrystallites
loaded onto high-surface area carbon (HSAC), Vulcan XC72, or reinforced-graphite
(RG) with identical Pt weight fraction (40 wt %) were submitted to
two accelerated stress test (AST) protocols from the Fuel Cell Commercialization
Conference of Japan (FCCJ) mimicking load-cycling or start-up/shutdown
events in a proton-exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC). The load-cycling
protocol essentially caused dissolution/redeposition and migration/aggregation/coalescence
of the Pt nanocrystallites but led to similar electrochemically active
surface area (ECSA) losses for the three Pt/C electrocatalysts. This
suggests that the nature of the carbon support plays a minor role
in the potential range 0.60 < E < 1.0 V versus
RHE. In contrast, the carbon support was strongly corroded under the
start-up/shutdown protocol (1.0 < E < 1.5 V
versus RHE), resulting in pronounced detachment of the Pt nanocrystallites
and massive ECSA losses. Raman spectroscopy and differential electrochemical
mass spectrometry were used to shed light on the underlying corrosion
mechanisms of structurally ordered and disordered carbon supports
in this potential region. Although for Pt/HSAC the start-up/shutdown
protocol resulted into preferential oxidation of the more disorganized
domains of the carbon support, new structural defects were generated
at quasi-graphitic crystallites for Pt/RG. Pt/Vulcan represented an
intermediate case. Finally, we show that oxygen affects the surface
chemistry of the carbon supports but negligibly influences the ECSA
losses for both aging protocols.
International audienceA complementary suite of in situ synchrotron X-ray techniques is used to investigate both structural and chemical evolution during ZnO growth by atomic layer deposition. Focusing on the first 10 cycles of growth, we observe that the structure formed during the coalescence stage largely determines the overall microstructure of the film. Furthermore, by comparing ZnO growth on silicon with a native oxide with that on Al2O3(001), we find that even with lattice-mismatched substrates and low deposition temperatures, the crystalline texture of the films is dependent strongly on the nature of the interfacial bonds
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