Enhancing Surface Strain of Intermetallic Fuel Cell Catalysts by Composition-Induced Phase Transition.
Ru-Yang ShaoXiangfu NiuXiao-Chu XuZhen-Hua ZhouSheng-Qi ChuLei TongLiang ZhangHai-Wei LiangPublished in: Nano letters (2024)
The lattice parameter of platinum-based intermetallic compounds (IMCs), which correlates with the intrinsic activity of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), can be modulated by crystal phase engineering. However, the controlled preparation of IMCs with unconventional crystal structures remains highly challenging. Here, we demonstrate the synthesis of carbon-supported PtCu-based IMC catalysts with an unconventional L1 0 structure by a composition-regulated strategy. Experiment and machine learning reveal that the thermodynamically favorable structure changes from L1 1 to L1 0 when slight Cu atoms are substituted with Co. Benefiting from crystal-phase-induced strain enhancement, the prepared L1 0 -type PtCu 0.8 Co 0.2 catalyst exhibits much-enhanced mass and specific activities of 1.82 A mg Pt -1 and 3.27 mA cm Pt -2 , which are 1.91 and 1.73 times higher than those of the L1 1 -type PtCu catalyst, respectively. Our work highlights the important role of crystal phase in determining the surface strain of IMCs, and opens a promising avenue for the rational preparation of IMCs with different crystal phases by doping.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- metal organic framework
- machine learning
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- single cell
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- transition metal
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- molecularly imprinted
- transcription factor
- molecular docking
- carbon dioxide
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high resolution
- visible light
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