The well-known limitation of alkaline
fuel cells is the slack kinetics
of the cathodic half-cell reaction, the oxygen reduction reaction
(ORR). Platinum, being the most active ORR catalyst, is still facing
challenges due to its corrosive nature and sluggish kinetics. Many
novel approaches for substituting Pt have been reported, which suffer
from stability issues even after mighty modifications. Designing an
extremely stable, but unexplored ordered intermetallic structure,
Pd2Ge, and tuning the electronic environment of the active
sites by site-selective Pt substitution to overcome the hurdle of
alkaline ORR is the main motive of this paper. The substitution of
platinum atoms at a specific Pd position leads to Pt0.2Pd1.8Ge demonstrating a half-wave potential (E
1/2) of 0.95 V vs RHE, which outperforms the state-of-the-art
catalyst 20% Pt/C. The mass activity (MA) of Pt0.2Pd1.8Ge is 320 mA/mgPt, which is almost 3.2 times
better than that of Pt/C. E
1/2 and MA
remained unaltered even after 50,000 accelerated degradation test
(ADT) cycles, which makes it a promising stable catalyst with its
activity better than that of the state-of-the-art Pt/C. The undesired
2e– transfer ORR forming hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is diminished in Pt0.2Pd1.8Ge as visible from the rotating ring-disk electrode (RRDE) experiment,
spectroscopically visualized by in situ Fourier transform infrared
(FTIR) spectroscopy and supported by computational studies. The effect
of Pt substitution on Pd has been properly manifested by X-ray absorption
spectroscopy (XAS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The
swinging of the oxidation state of atomic sites of Pt0.2Pd1.8Ge during the reaction is probed by in situ XAS,
which efficiently enhances 4e– transfer, producing
an extremely low percentage of H2O2.