| Literature DB >> 31423678 |
Shuiping Luo1, Wen Chen1, Yu Cheng1, Xing Song1, Qilong Wu1, Lanxi Li1, Xiaotong Wu1, Tianhao Wu1, Mingrui Li1, Qi Yang1, Kerong Deng1, Zewei Quan1.
Abstract
Platinum is the most effective metal for a wide range of catalysis reactions, but it fails in the formic acid electrooxidation test and suffers from severe carbon monoxide poisoning. Developing highly active and stable catalysts that are capable of oxidizing HCOOH directly into CO2 remains challenging for commercialization of direct liquid fuel cells. A new class of PtSnBi intermetallic nanoplates is synthesized to boost formic acid oxidation, which greatly outperforms binary PtSn and PtBi intermetallic, benefiting from the synergism of chosen three metals. In particular, the best catalyst, atomically ordered Pt45 Sn25 Bi30 nanoplates, exhibits an ultrahigh mass activity of 4394 mA mg-1 Pt and preserves 78% of the initial activity after 4000 potential cycles, which make it a state-of-the-art catalyst toward formic acid oxidation. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the electronic and geometric effects in PtSnBi intermetallic nanoplates help suppress CO* formation and optimize dehydrogenation steps.Entities:
Keywords: electrocatalysis; formic acid oxidation; intermetallic catalysts; nanoplates
Year: 2019 PMID: 31423678 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201903683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849