Login / Signup

Acid anion electrolyte effects on platinum for oxygen and hydrogen electrocatalysis.

Gaurav Ashish KamatJosé A Zamora ZeledónG T Kasun Kalhara GunasooriyaSamuel M DullJoseph T PerrymanJens K NørskovMichaela Burke StevensThomas Francisco Jaramillo
Published in: Communications chemistry (2022)
Platinum is an important material with applications in oxygen and hydrogen electrocatalysis. To better understand how its activity can be modulated through electrolyte effects in the double layer microenvironment, herein we investigate the effects of different acid anions on platinum for the oxygen reduction/evolution reaction (ORR/OER) and hydrogen evolution/oxidation reaction (HER/HOR) in pH 1 electrolytes. Experimentally, we see the ORR activity trend of HClO 4  > HNO 3  > H 2 SO 4 , and the OER activity trend of HClO 4 [Formula: see text] HNO 3 ∼ H 2 SO 4 . HER/HOR performance is similar across all three electrolytes. Notably, we demonstrate that ORR performance can be improved 4-fold in nitric acid compared to in sulfuric acid. Assessing the potential-dependent role of relative anion competitive adsorption with density functional theory, we calculate unfavorable adsorption on Pt(111) for all the anions at HER/HOR conditions while under ORR/OER conditions [Formula: see text] binds the weakest followed by [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. Our combined experimental-theoretical work highlights the importance of understanding the role of anions across a large potential range and reveals nitrate-like electrolyte microenvironments as interesting possible sulfonate alternatives to mitigate the catalyst poisoning effects of polymer membranes/ionomers in electrochemical systems. These findings help inform rational design approaches to further enhance catalyst activity via microenvironment engineering.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • room temperature
  • density functional theory
  • smoking cessation
  • human milk
  • stem cells
  • molecular dynamics
  • nitric oxide
  • drinking water
  • preterm infants
  • climate change
  • label free