Catalytic Reactivation of Industrial Oxygen Depolarized Cathodes by in situ Generation of Atomic Hydrogen.
Denis ÖhlDavid FranzenMelanie PaulischStefan DieckhöferStefan BarweCorina AndronescuIngo MankeThomas TurekWolfgang SchuhmannPublished in: ChemSusChem (2019)
Electrocatalytically active materials on the industrial as well as on the laboratory scale may suffer from chemical instability during operation, air exposure, or storage in the electrolyte. A strategy to recover the loss of electrocatalytic activity is presented. Oxygen-depolarized cathodes (ODC), analogous to those that are utilized in industrial brine electrolysis, are analyzed: the catalytic activity of the electrodes upon storage (4 weeks) under industrial process conditions (30 wt % NaOH, without operation) diminishes. This phenomenon occurs as a consequence of surface oxidation and pore blockage, as revealed by scanning electron microscopy, focused ion beam milling, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. Potentiodynamic cycling of the oxidized electrodes to highly reductive potentials and the formation of "nascent" hydrogen re-reduces the electrode material, ultimately recovering the former catalytic activity.
Keyphrases
- electron microscopy
- wastewater treatment
- heavy metals
- raman spectroscopy
- solid state
- reduced graphene oxide
- high resolution
- ion batteries
- carbon nanotubes
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance imaging
- visible light
- hydrogen peroxide
- magnetic resonance
- ionic liquid
- single molecule
- mass spectrometry
- metal organic framework