“…High anode potential favors BOR activity unless the electrocatalyst is poisoned by reaction intermediates [H*, OH*, BH x * ( x = 1–4), BH x O y * ( x = 1–4, y = 1–3), and BO y * ( y = 1–2)] or passivated by metal oxides/hydroxides/oxyhydroxides. , d-block metals such as Pt, Pd, and Ir strongly promote the dissociative adsorption of BH 4 – , leading to the formation of borane (BH x ) and hydroxyborane (BH x O y ) intermediates on the surface of the electrocatalyst. , However, the aforementioned metals bind with hydrogen moderately (Δ G H* = ( G H* – G * –0.5 G H2 ∼ 0.0 eV (* = active site)), leading to a parallel hydrolysis reaction with remarkably high rates. ,,, The high rate of the hydrolysis reaction results in the reduction of the selectivity of the BOR and the Faradaic efficiency of the DBFC . Coinage metals such as Au, Ag, and Cu bind with BH 4 – through molecular adsorption rather than dissociative adsorption. ,− These metals adsorb hydrogen weakly, resulting in a low hydrolysis rate. ,,, In fact, Au shows the highest selectivity toward BOR over hydrolysis, but it exhibits very low activity because of the less-favorable adsorption energy of BH 4 – vis-à-vis the water molecule. , Furthermore, these coinage metals show low electrocatalytic activity toward the BOR owing to their inability to activate B–H bond breaking. ,, Despite not producing all the eight electrons during BH 4 – oxidation, Pd electrocatalysts enable large current densities with high Faradaic efficiencies. ,,− However, full utilization of the active sites is not possible because of the high rate of the parasitic hydrolysis (hydrogen evolution) reaction, which blocks access to the active sites. Alloying or mixing d-group metals (e.g., Ir, Sn, Ni, Ni-Cu, , or Ni-Co) with Pd metal has resulted in an increase in the activity and selectivity of BOR.…”