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Department of Energy Science and Engineering
Advanced Energy Materials Laboratory
1. Journal Articles
High pressure pyrolyzed non-precious metal oxygen reduction catalysts for alkaline polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells
Sanetuntikul, Jakkid
;
Shanmugam, Sangaraju
Department of Energy Science and Engineering
Advanced Energy Materials Laboratory
1. Journal Articles
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Title
High pressure pyrolyzed non-precious metal oxygen reduction catalysts for alkaline polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells
Issued Date
2015
Citation
Sanetuntikul, Jakkid. (2015). High pressure pyrolyzed non-precious metal oxygen reduction catalysts for alkaline polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells. Nanoscale, 7(17), 7644–7650. doi: 10.1039/c5nr00311c
Type
Article
Keywords
NITROGEN-DOPED CARBON
;
CATHODE CATALYST
;
ELECTROCATALYSTS
;
GRAPHENE
;
FE
;
POLYANILINE
;
IRON
ISSN
2040-3364
Abstract
Non-precious metal catalysts, such as metal-coordinated to nitrogen doped-carbon, have shown reasonable oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) performances in alkaline fuel cells. In this report, we present the development of a highly active, stable and low-cost non-precious metal ORR catalyst by direct synthesis under autogenic-pressure conditions. Transmission electron microscopy studies show highly porous Fe-N-C and Co-N-C structures, which were further confirmed by Brunauer-Emmett-Teller surface area measurements. The surface areas of the Fe-N-C and Co-N-C catalysts were found to be 377.5 and 369.3 m2 g-1, respectively. XPS results show the possible existence of N-C and M-N
x
structures, which are generally proposed to be the active sites in non-precious metal catalysts. The Fe-N-C electrocatalyst exhibits an ORR half-wave potential 20 mV higher than the reference Pt/C catalyst. The cycling durability test for Fe-N-C over 5000 cycles shows that the half-wave potential lost only 4 mV, whereas the half-wave potential of the Pt/C catalyst lost about 50 mV. The Fe-N-C catalyst exhibited an improved activity and stability compared to the reference Pt/C catalyst and it possesses a direct 4-electron transfer pathway for the ORR process. Further, the Fe-N-C catalyst produces extremely low HO
2
- content, as confirmed by the rotating ring-disk electrode measurements. In the alkaline fuel single cell tests, maximum power densities of 75 and 80 mW cm-2 were observed for the Fe-N-C and Pt/C cathodes, respectively. Durability studies (100 h) showed that decay of the fuel cell current was more prominent for the Pt/C cathode catalyst compared to the Fe-N-C cathode catalyst. Therefore, the Fe-N-C catalyst appears to be a promising new class of non-precious metal catalysts prepared by an autogenic synthetic method. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/2979
DOI
10.1039/c5nr00311c
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
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Shanmugam, Sangaraju
상가라쥬샨무감
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