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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(36): 12837-12846, 2017 09 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28810123

RESUMEN

Iridium-based particles, regarded as the most promising proton exchange membrane electrolyzer electrocatalysts, were investigated by transmission electron microscopy and by coupling of an electrochemical flow cell (EFC) with online inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Additionally, studies using a thin-film rotating disc electrode, identical location transmission and scanning electron microscopy, as well as X-ray absorption spectroscopy have been performed. Extremely sensitive online time-and potential-resolved electrochemical dissolution profiles revealed that Ir particles dissolve well below oxygen evolution reaction (OER) potentials, presumably induced by Ir surface oxidation and reduction processes, also referred to as transient dissolution. Overall, thermally prepared rutile-type IrO2 particles are substantially more stable and less active in comparison to as-prepared metallic and electrochemically pretreated (E-Ir) analogues. Interestingly, under OER-relevant conditions, E-Ir particles exhibit superior stability and activity owing to the altered corrosion mechanism, where the formation of unstable Ir(>IV) species is hindered. Due to the enhanced and lasting OER performance, electrochemically pre-oxidized E-Ir particles may be considered as the electrocatalyst of choice for an improved low-temperature electrochemical hydrogen production device, namely a proton exchange membrane electrolyzer.

2.
Acta Chim Slov ; 61(2): 280-3, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25125111

RESUMEN

Platinum catalyst stability has been investigated under potentiostatic and potentiodynamic conditions with and without the presence of chloride anions. The combination of rotating disc electrode (RDE) and identical location scanning electron microscopy (IL-SEM) methods reveals that potentiodynamic degradation is much more severe compared to the potentiostatic and that chloride enhances platinum dissolution thus catalyst degradation. IL-SEM method nicely shows the platinum dissolution and redeposition on the top of a catalyst film.

3.
Ultramicroscopy ; 140: 44-50, 2014 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24662366

RESUMEN

A general method for tracking morphological surface changes on a nanometer scale with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) is introduced. We exemplify the usefulness of the method by showing consecutive SEM images of an identical location before and after the electrochemical and thermal treatments of platinum-based nanoparticles deposited on a high surface area carbon. Observations reveal an insight into platinum based catalyst degradation occurring during potential cycling treatment. The presence of chloride clearly increases the rate of degradation. At these conditions the dominant degradation mechanism seems to be the platinum dissolution with some subsequent redeposition on the top of the catalyst film. By contrast, at the temperature of 60°C, under potentiostatic conditions some carbon corrosion and particle aggregation was observed. Temperature treatment simulating the annealing step of the synthesis reveals sintering of small platinum based composite aggregates into uniform spherical particles. The method provides a direct proof of induced surface phenomena occurring on a chosen location without the usual statistical uncertainty in usual, random SEM observations across relatively large surface areas.

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