Highly Dispersed Platinum Chlorine Atoms Anchored on Gold Quantum Dots for a Highly Efficient Electrocatalyst.
Lan HuiXueting ZhangYurui XueXi ChenYan FangChengyu XingYuxin LiuXuchen ZhengYuncheng DuChao ZhangFeng HeYuliang LiPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
The development of efficient and durable electrocatalysts is the only way to achieve commercial fuel cells. A new, efficient method was utilized for epitaxial growth of gold quantum dots using atomically platinum chlorine species with porous graphdiyne as a support (PtCl 2 Au(111)/GDY), for obtaining successful multicomponent quantum dots with a size of 2.37 nm. The electrocatalyst showed a high mass activity of 175.64 A mg Pt -1 for methanol oxidation reactions (MORs) and 165.35 A mg Pt -1 for ethanol oxidation reactions (EORs). The data for this experiment are 85.67 and 246.80 times higher than those of commercial Pt/C, respectively. The catalyst also showed highly robust stability for MORs with negligible specific activity decay after 110 h at 10 mA cm -2 . Both structure characterizations and theoretical calculations reveal that the excellent catalytic performance can be ascribed to the chlorine introduced to modify the d-band structure on the Pt surface and suppression of the CO poisoning pathway of the MOR. Our results indicate that an atomically dispersed metal species tailoring strategy opens up a new path for the efficient design of highly active and stable catalysts.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- quantum dots
- sensitive detection
- drinking water
- metal organic framework
- induced apoptosis
- hydrogen peroxide
- energy transfer
- visible light
- electronic health record
- photodynamic therapy
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- cell cycle arrest
- nitric oxide
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gold nanoparticles
- oxidative stress
- data analysis