2 research outputs found
Chemical Strategies for Enhancing Activity and Charge Transfer in Ultrathin Pt Nanowires Immobilized onto Nanotube Supports for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction
Multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs)
represent a promising support medium for electrocatalysts, especially
Pt nanoparticles (NPs). The advantages of using MWNTs include their
large surface area, high conductivity, as well as long-term stability.
Surface functionalization of MWNTs with various terminal groups, such
as −COOH, −SH, and −NH<sub>2</sub>, allows for
rational electronic tuning of catalyst–support interactions.
However, several issues still need to be addressed for such systems.
First, over the course of an electrochemical run, catalyst durability
can decrease, due in part to metal NP dissolution, a process facilitated
by the inherently high surface defect concentration within the support.
Second, the covalent functionalization treatment of MWNTs adopted
by most groups tends to lead to a loss of structural integrity of
the nanotubes (NTs). To mitigate for all of these issues, we have
utilized two different attachment approaches (i.e., covalent versus
noncovalent) to functionalize the outer walls of pristine MWNTs and
compared the catalytic performance of as-deposited ultrathin (<2
nm) 1D Pt nanowires with that of conventional Pt NPs toward the oxygen
reduction reaction (ORR). Our results demonstrated that the electrochemical
activity of Pt nanostructures immobilized onto functionalized carbon
nanotube (CNT) supports could be dramatically improved by using ultrathin
Pt nanowires (instead of NPs) with noncovalently (as opposed to covalently)
functionalized CNT supports. Spectroscopic evidence corroborated the
definitive presence of charge transfer between the metal catalysts
and the underlying NT support, whose direction and magnitude are a
direct function of (i) the terminal chemistry as well as (ii) the
attachment methodology, both of which simultaneously impact upon the
observed electrocatalytic performance. Specifically, the use of a
noncovalent π–π stacking method coupled with a
−COOH terminal moiety yielded the highest performance results,
reported to date, for any similar system consisting of Pt (commercial
NPs or otherwise) deposited onto carbon-based supports, a finding
of broader interest toward the fabrication of high-performing electrocatalysts
in general
Probing the Dependence of Electron Transfer on Size and Coverage in Carbon Nanotube–Quantum Dot Heterostructures
As a model system for understanding
charge transfer in novel architectural designs for solar cells, double-walled
carbon nanotube (DWNT)–CdSe quantum dot (QD) (QDs with average
diameters of 2.3, 3.0, and 4.1 nm) heterostructures have been fabricated.
The individual nanoscale building blocks were successfully attached
and combined using a hole-trapping thiol linker molecule, i.e., 4-mercaptophenol
(MTH), through a facile, noncovalent π–π stacking
attachment strategy. Transmission electron microscopy confirmed the
attachment of QDs onto the external surfaces of the DWNTs. We herein
demonstrate a meaningful and unique combination of near-edge X-ray
absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) and Raman spectroscopies bolstered
by complementary electrical transport measurements in order to elucidate
the synergistic interactions between CdSe QDs and DWNTs, which are
facilitated by the bridging MTH molecules that can scavenge photoinduced
holes and potentially mediate electron redistribution between the
conduction bands in CdSe QDs and the C 2p-derived states of the DWNTs.
Specifically, we correlated evidence of charge transfer as manifested
by (i) changes in the NEXAFS intensities of π* resonance in
the C <i>K</i>-edge and Cd <i>M</i><sub>3</sub>-edge spectra, (ii) a perceptible outer tube G-band downshift in
frequency in Raman spectra, as well as (iii) alterations in the threshold
characteristics present in transport data as a function of CdSe QD
deposition onto the DWNT surface. In particular, the separate effects
of (i) varying QD sizes and (ii) QD coverage densities on the electron
transfer were independently studied