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Extending the limits of Pt/C catalysts with...
Journal article

Extending the limits of Pt/C catalysts with passivation-gas-incorporated atomic layer deposition

Abstract

Controlling the morphology of noble metal nanoparticles during surface depositions is strongly influenced by precursor–substrate and precursor–deposit interactions. Depositions can be improved through a variety of means, including tailoring the surface energy of a substrate to improve precursor wettability, or by modifying the surface energy of the deposits themselves. Here, we show that carbon monoxide can be used as a passivation gas during atomic layer deposition to modify the surface energy of already deposited Pt nanoparticles to assist direct deposition onto a carbon catalyst support. The passivation process promotes two-dimensional growth leading to Pt nanoparticles with suppressed thicknesses and a more than 40% improvement in Pt surface-to-volume ratio. This approach to synthesizing nanoparticulate Pt/C catalysts achieved high Pt mass activities for the oxygen reduction reaction, along with excellent stability likely facilitated by strong catalyst–support interactions afforded by this synthetic technique.

Authors

Xu S; Kim Y; Park J; Higgins D; Shen S-J; Schindler P; Thian D; Provine J; Torgersen J; Graf T

Journal

Nature Catalysis, Vol. 1, No. 8, pp. 624–630

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

August 1, 2018

DOI

10.1038/s41929-018-0118-1

ISSN

2520-1158
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