Tran, H.P. and Nong, H.N. and Zlatar, M. and Yoon, A. and Hejral, U. and Rüscher, M. and Timoshenko, J. and Selve, S. and Berger, D. and Kroschel, M. and Klingenhof, M. and Paul, B. and Möhle, S. and Nagi Nasralla, K.N. and Escalera-López, D. and Bergmann, A. and Cherevko, S. and Cuenya, B.R. and Strasser, P. (2024) Reactivity and Stability of Reduced Ir-Weight TiO2-Supported Oxygen Evolution Catalysts for Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) Water Electrolyzer Anodes. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 146 (46). pp. 31444-31455.
Full text not available from this repository. (Upload)Abstract
Reducing the iridium demand in Proton Exchange Membrane Water Electrolyzers (PEM WE) is a critical priority for the green hydrogen industry. This study reports the discovery of a TiO2-supported Ir@IrO(OH)x core-shell nanoparticle catalyst with reduced Ir content, which exhibits superior catalytic performance for the electrochemical oxygen evolution reaction (OER) compared to a commercial reference. The TiO2-supported Ir@IrO(OH)x core-shell nanoparticle configuration significantly enhances the OER Ir mass activity from 8 to approximately 150 A gIr-1 at 1.53 VRHE while reducing the iridium packing density from 1.6 to below 0.77 gIr cm-3. These advancements allow for viable anode layer thicknesses with lower Ir loading, reducing iridium utilization at 70 LHV from 0.42 to 0.075 gIr kW-1 compared to commercial IrO2/TiO2. The identification of the Ir@IrO(OH)x/TiO2 OER catalyst resulted from extensive HAADF-EDX microscopic analysis, operando XAS, and online ICP-MS analysis of 30-80 wt Ir/TiO2 materials. These analyses established correlations among Ir weight loading, electrode electrical conductivity, electrochemical stability, and Ir mass-based OER activity. The activated Ir@IrO(OH)x/TiO2 catalyst-support system demonstrated an exceptionally stable morphology of supported core-shell particles, suggesting strong catalyst-support interactions (CSIs) between nanoparticles and crystalline oxide facets. Operando XAS analysis revealed the reversible evolution of significantly contracted Ir-O bond motifs with enhanced covalent character, conducive to the formation of catalytically active electrophilic OI- ligand species. These findings indicate that atomic Ir surface dissolution generates Ir lattice vacancies, facilitating the emergence of electrophilic OI- species under OER conditions, while CSIs promote the reversible contraction of Ir-O distances, reforming electrophilic OI- and enhancing both catalytic activity and stability. © 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Divisions: | Offices > Office of International Cooperation |
Identification Number: | 10.1021/jacs.4c07002 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Biochemical oxygen demand; Bioremediation; Catalytic reforming; Core shell nanoparticles; Electrolytic reduction; Ion exchange membranes; Iridium; Iridium compounds; Metamorphic rocks; Mineral oils; Negative ions; Oxygen evolution reaction; Palladium; Petroleum tar; Positive ions; Proton transfer; Rate constants; TiO2 nanoparticles, Catalysts support; Core-shell nanoparticles; Evolution reactions; Operando; Oxygen evolution; Proton exchange membranes; Support interaction; TiO 2; Water electrolyzer; ]+ catalyst, Titanium dioxide, 2 propanol; nanoparticle; titanium dioxide; titanium dioxide nanoparticle; core shell nanoparticle; hydrogen; iridium; proton, Article; catalyst; controlled study; corrosion; dissolution; electric conductivity; electron microscopy; electron transport; electrophilicity; elemental analysis; energy dispersive X ray spectroscopy; flow rate; fluorescence analysis; Fourier transform mass spectrometry; Inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy; mass spectrometry; nonhuman; optical coherence tomography; oxygen evolution; particle size; physicochemical model; potentiostatic electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; proton exchange membrane; proton transport; scanning electron microscopy; stability; surface property; transmission electron microscopy; X ray absorption spectroscopy; X ray diffraction; anode electrode; article; catalysis; catalyst support; electrode; inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer; inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry; membrane; oxygen evolution reaction; thickness; water |
URI: | http://eprints.lqdtu.edu.vn/id/eprint/11457 |