Ternary nickel-tungsten-copper alloy rivals platinum for catalyzing alkaline hydrogen oxidation.
Shuai QinYu DuanXiao-Long ZhangLi-Rong ZhengFei-Yue GaoPeng-Peng YangZhuang-Zhuang NiuRen LiuYu YangXu-Sheng ZhengJun-Fa ZhuMin-Rui GaoPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Operating fuel cells in alkaline environments permits the use of platinum-group-metal-free (PGM-free) catalysts and inexpensive bipolar plates, leading to significant cost reduction. Of the PGM-free catalysts explored, however, only a few nickel-based materials are active for catalyzing the hydrogen oxidation reaction (HOR) in alkali; moreover, these catalysts deactivate rapidly at high anode potentials owing to nickel hydroxide formation. Here we describe that a nickel-tungsten-copper (Ni5.2WCu2.2) ternary alloy showing HOR activity rivals Pt/C benchmark in alkaline electrolyte. Importantly, we achieved a high anode potential up to 0.3 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode on this catalyst with good operational stability over 20 h. The catalyst also displays excellent CO-tolerant ability that Pt/C catalyst lacks. Experimental and theoretical studies uncover that nickel, tungsten, and copper play in synergy to create a favorable alloying surface for optimized hydrogen and hydroxyl bindings, as well as for the improved oxidation resistance, which result in the HOR enhancement.
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