Sebastian HenningLaura KühnJuan HerranzJulien DurstTobias BinningerMaarten NachtegaalMatthias WerheidWei LiuMarion AdamStefan KaskelAlexander EychmüllerThomas J. Schmidt
The commercial feasibility of polymer electrolyte fuel cells (PEFCs) passes by the development of Pt-based, O2-reduction catalysts with greater activities and/or lower Pt-contents, as well as an improved stability. In an effort to tackle these requirements, unsupported bimetallic Pt-Ni nanoparticles (NPs) interconnected in the shape of nanochain networks (aerogels) were synthesized using a simple one-step reduction and gel formation process in aqueous solution. The products of this novel synthetic route were characterized by X-ray absorption spectroscopy to elucidate the materials' structure. Using electrochemical experiments, we probed the surface composition of the as-synthesized aerogels and of equivalent materials exposed to acid, and concluded that a Ni-(hydr)oxide side phase is present in the aerogel with a larger Ni-concentration. Regardless of this initial surface composition, the Pt-Ni aerogels feature a ≈3-fold increase of surface-specific ORR activity when compared to a commercial platinum-on-carbon catalyst, reaching the mass-specific requirement for application in automotive PEFCs.
Qiaowan ChangYuan XuShangqian ZhuFei XiaoMinhua Shao
Xinlong TianXu YangWenyu ZhangTian WuBao Yu XiaXin Wang
Sebastian HenningJuan HerranzLaura KühnAlexander EychmüllerThomas J. Schmidt
Quan WangBaosen MiJun ZhouZiwei QinZhuo ChenHongbin Wang
Yuanyuan ZhengAmanda Schramm PetersenHao WanRené HübnerJiangwei ZhangJianlan WangHaoyuan QiYuhong YeChaolun LiangJing YangZhiming CuiYuezhong MengZhikun ZhengJan RossmeislWei Liu