A substantial amount of research
effort has been directed toward
the development of Pt-based catalysts with higher performance and
durability than conventional polycrystalline Pt nanoparticles to achieve
high-power and innovative energy conversion systems. Currently, attention
has been paid toward expanding the electrochemically active surface
area (ECSA) of catalysts and increase their intrinsic activity in
the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). However, despite innumerable
efforts having been carried out to explore this possibility, most
of these achievements have focused on the rotating disk electrode
(RDE) in half-cells, and relatively few results have been adaptable
to membrane electrode assemblies (MEAs) in full-cells, which is the
actual operating condition of fuel cells. Thus, it is uncertain whether
these advanced catalysts can be used as a substitute in practical
fuel cell applications, and an improvement in the catalytic performance
in real-life fuel cells is still necessary. Therefore, from a more
practical and industrial point of view, the goal of this review is
to compare the ORR catalyst performance and durability in half- and
full-cells, providing a differentiated approach to the durability
concerns in half- and full-cells, and share new perspectives for strategic
designs used to induce additional performance in full-cell devices.
Composite metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) tend to possess complex interfaces that prevent facile and rational design. Here we present a joint computational/experimental workflow that screens thousands of MOFs and identifies the optimal MOF pairs that can seamlessly connect to one another by taking advantage of the fact that the metal nodes of one MOF can form coordination bonds with the linkers of the second MOF. Six MOF pairs (HKUST-1@MOF-5, HKUST-1@IRMOF-18, UiO-67@HKUST-1, PCN-68@MOF-5, UiO-66@MIL-88B(Fe) and UiO-67@MIL-88C(Fe)) yielded from our theoretical predictions were successfully synthesized, leading to clean single crystalline MOF@MOF, demonstrating the power of our joint workflow. Our work can serve as a starting point to accelerate the discovery of novel MOF composites that can potentially be used for many different applications.
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