Many industrial catalysts are composed of metal particles supported on metal oxides (MMO). It is known that the catalytic activity of MMO materials is governed by metal and metal oxide interactions (MMOI), but how to optimize MMO systems via manipulation of MMOI remains unclear, due primarily to the ambiguous nature of MMOI. Herein, we develop a Pt/NbO/C system with tunable structural and electronic properties via a modified arc plasma deposition method. We unravel the nature of MMOI by characterizing this system under reactive conditions utilizing combined electrochemical, microscopy, and in situ spectroscopy. We show that Pt interacts with the Nb in unsaturated NbO owing to the oxygen deficiency in the MMO interface, whereas Pt interacts with the O in nearly saturated NbO, and further interacts with Nb when the oxygen atoms penetrate into the Pt cluster at elevated potentials. While the Pt-Nb interactions do not benefit the inherent activity of Pt toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), the Pt-O interactions improve the ORR activity by shortening the Pt-Pt bond distance. Pt donates electrons to NbO in both Pt-Nb and Pt-O cases. The resultant electron eficiency stabilizes low-coordinated Pt sites, hereby stabilizing small Pt particles. This determines the two characteristic features of MMO systems: dispersion of small metal particles and high catalytic durability. These findings contribute to our understandings of MMO catalytic systems.
This review analyzes the structural factors that impact Pt utilization in PEMFCs in great detail, emphasizing the mechanistic and molecule-level insights.
Nitrogen (N)‐doped carbons are potential nonprecious metal catalysts to replace Pt for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Pyridinic‐N‐C is believed to be the most active N group for catalyzing ORR. In this work, using zinc phthalocyanine as a precursor effectively overcomes the serious loss of pyridinic‐N, which is commonly regarded as the biggest obstacle to catalytic performance enhancement upon adopting a second pyrolysis process, for the preparation of a 3D porous N‐doped carbon framework (NDCF). The results show only ≈14% loss in pyridinic‐N proportion in the Zn‐containing sample during the second pyrolysis process. In comparison, a loss of ≈72% pyridinic‐N occurs for the non‐Zn counterpart. The high pyridinic‐N proportion, the porous carbon framework produced upon NaCl removal, and the increased mesoporous defects in the second pyrolysis process make the as‐prepared catalyst an excellent electrocatalyst for ORR, exhibiting a half‐wave potential (E1/2 = 0.88 V) up to 33 mV superior to state‐of‐the‐art Pt/C and high four‐electron selectivity (n > 3.83) in alkaline solution, which is among the best ORR activities reported for N‐doped carbon catalysts. Furthermore, only ≈18 mV degradation in E1/2 occurs after an 8000 cycles' accelerating stability test, manifesting the outstanding stability of the as‐prepared catalyst.
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