TY - JOUR
T1 - Extended-Surface Thin-Film Platinum Electrocatalysts with Tunable Nanostructured Morphologies
AU - Bhattacharya, Deepra
AU - Wang, Ke
AU - Wu, Guang Peng
AU - Arges, Christopher
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/8/28
Y1 - 2023/8/28
N2 - Reducing platinum group metal (PGM) loadings in fuel cells and electrolyzers is paramount for cost reductions and getting hydrogen to scale to help decarbonize the global economy. Conventional PGM nanoparticle-based ink-cast electrocatalysts lose performance at high current densities owing to mass transport resistances that arise due to the use of ionomer binders. Herein, we report the development of binder-free extended-surface thin-film platinum electrocatalysts with tunable nanoscale morphology and periodic spacing. The electrocatalysts are prepared by sputtering various loadings of platinum on Al2O3 nanostructures templated from self-assembled block copolymer (BCP) thin films on glassy carbon substrates. Testing for oxygen reduction on a rotating disk electrode setup with ultralow PGM loadings (5.8 μgPt cm-2) demonstrates electrocatalyst performance that rivals commercial platinum electrocatalysts in terms of mass activity (380 mA mgPt-1 at 0.9 V vs RHE) while surpassing commercial catalysts in terms of stability (mass activity loss: 11-13% after 20,000 potential cycles). Moreover, catalyst performance probed as a function of nanoscale feature size and morphology reveals an inverse correlation between feature size and electroactivity, as well as the superiority of cylindrical morphologies over lamellae, presenting BCP templating as a fabrication pathway toward stable, tunable catalyst geometries.
AB - Reducing platinum group metal (PGM) loadings in fuel cells and electrolyzers is paramount for cost reductions and getting hydrogen to scale to help decarbonize the global economy. Conventional PGM nanoparticle-based ink-cast electrocatalysts lose performance at high current densities owing to mass transport resistances that arise due to the use of ionomer binders. Herein, we report the development of binder-free extended-surface thin-film platinum electrocatalysts with tunable nanoscale morphology and periodic spacing. The electrocatalysts are prepared by sputtering various loadings of platinum on Al2O3 nanostructures templated from self-assembled block copolymer (BCP) thin films on glassy carbon substrates. Testing for oxygen reduction on a rotating disk electrode setup with ultralow PGM loadings (5.8 μgPt cm-2) demonstrates electrocatalyst performance that rivals commercial platinum electrocatalysts in terms of mass activity (380 mA mgPt-1 at 0.9 V vs RHE) while surpassing commercial catalysts in terms of stability (mass activity loss: 11-13% after 20,000 potential cycles). Moreover, catalyst performance probed as a function of nanoscale feature size and morphology reveals an inverse correlation between feature size and electroactivity, as well as the superiority of cylindrical morphologies over lamellae, presenting BCP templating as a fabrication pathway toward stable, tunable catalyst geometries.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacsau.3c00277
DO - 10.1021/jacsau.3c00277
M3 - Article
C2 - 37654581
AN - SCOPUS:85167883760
SN - 2691-3704
VL - 3
SP - 2269
EP - 2279
JO - JACS Au
JF - JACS Au
IS - 8
ER -