High CO-Tolerant Ru-Based Catalysts by Constructing an Oxide Blocking Layer.
Tao WangLai-Yang LiLi-Na ChenTian ShengLu-Ning ChenYu-Cheng WangPengyang ZhangYu-Hao HongJinyu YeWen-Feng LinQinghua ZhangPeng ZhangGang FuNa TianShi-Gang SunZhi-You ZhouPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
CO poisoning of Pt-group metal catalysts is a long-standing problem, particularly for hydrogen oxidation reaction in proton exchange membrane fuel cells. Here, we report a catalyst of Ru oxide-coated Ru supported on TiO 2 (Ru@RuO 2 /TiO 2 ), which can tolerate 1-3% CO, enhanced by about 2 orders of magnitude over the classic PtRu/C catalyst, for hydrogen electrooxidation in a rotating disk electrode test. This catalyst can work stably in 1% CO/H 2 for 50 h. About 20% of active sites can survive even in a pure CO environment. The high CO tolerance is not via a traditional bifunctional mechanism, i.e., oxide promoting CO oxidation, but rather via hydrous metal oxide shell blocking CO adsorption. An ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulation indicates that water confined in grain boundaries of the Ru oxide layer and Ru surface can suppress the diffusion and adsorption of CO. This oxide blocking layer approach opens a promising avenue for the design of high CO-tolerant electrocatalysts for fuel cells.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- highly efficient
- molecular dynamics
- induced apoptosis
- energy transfer
- metal organic framework
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- cell cycle arrest
- reduced graphene oxide
- hydrogen peroxide
- nitric oxide
- quantum dots
- carbon dioxide
- density functional theory
- signaling pathway
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- pi k akt
- solid state