2,509 research outputs found
Oxygen Hydration Mechanism for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction at Pt and Pd Fuel Cell Catalysts
We report the reaction pathways and barriers for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on platinum, both for gas phase and in solution, based on quantum mechanics calculations (PBE-DFT) on semi-infinite slabs. We find a new mechanism in solution: O_2 → 2O_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.00 eV), O_(ad) + H_2O_(ad) → 2OH_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.50 eV), OH_(ad) + H_(ad) → H_2O_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.24 eV), in which OH_(ad) is formed by the hydration of surface O_(ad). For the gas phase (hydrophilic phase of Nafion), we find that the favored step for activation of the O_2 is H_(ad) + O_(2ad) → HOO_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.30 eV) → HO_(ad) + O_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.12 eV) followed by O_(ad) + H_2O_(ad) → 2OH_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.23 eV), OH_(ad) + H_(ad) → H_2O_(ad) (E_(act) = 0.14 eV). This suggests that to improve the efficiency of ORR catalysts, we should focus on decreasing the barrier for Oad hydration while providing hydrophobic conditions for the OH and H_2O formation steps
Theoretical Study of Solvent Effects on the Platinum-Catalyzed Oxygen Reduction Reaction
We report here density functional theory (DFT) studies (PBE) of the reaction intermediates and barriers involved in the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on a platinum fuel cell catalyst. Solvent effects were taken into account by applying continuum Poisson−Boltzmann theory to the bound adsorbates and to the transition states of the various reactions on the platinum (111) surface. Our calculations show that the solvent effects change significantly the reaction barriers compared with those in the gas-phase environment (without solvation). The O_2 dissociation barrier decreases from 0.58 to 0.27 eV, whereas the H + O → OH formation barrier increases from 0.73 to 1.09 eV. In the water-solvated phase, OH formation becomes the rate-determining step for both ORR mechanisms, O_2 dissociation and OOH association, proposed earlier for the gas-phase environment. Both mechanisms become significantly less favorable for the platinum catalytic surface in water solvent, suggesting that alternative mechanisms must be considered to describe properly the ORR on the platinum surface
Reaction mechanism and kinetics for CO₂ reduction on nickel single atom catalysts from quantum mechanics
Experiments have shown that graphene-supported Ni-single atom catalysts (Ni-SACs) provide a promising strategy for the electrochemical reduction of CO₂ to CO, but the nature of the Ni sites (Ni-N₂C₂, Ni-N₃C₁, Ni-N₄) in Ni-SACs has not been determined experimentally. Here, we apply the recently developed grand canonical potential kinetics (GCP-K) formulation of quantum mechanics to predict the kinetics as a function of applied potential (U) to determine faradic efficiency, turn over frequency, and Tafel slope for CO and H₂ production for all three sites. We predict an onset potential (at 10 mA cm⁻²) U_(onset) = −0.84 V (vs. RHE) for Ni-N₂C₂ site and U_(onset) = −0.92 V for Ni-N₃C₁ site in agreement with experiments, and U_(onset) = −1.03 V for Ni-N₄. We predict that the highest current is for Ni-N₄, leading to 700 mA cm⁻² at U = −1.12 V. To help determine the actual sites in the experiments, we predict the XPS binding energy shift and CO vibrational frequency for each site
Mechanism for Degradation of Nafion in PEM Fuel Cells from Quantum Mechanics Calculations
We report results of quantum mechanics (QM) mechanistic studies of Nafion membrane degradation in a polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cell. Experiments suggest that Nafion degradation is caused by generation of trace radical species (such as OH^●, H^●) only when in the presence of H_2, O_2, and Pt. We use density functional theory (DFT) to construct the potential energy surfaces for various plausible reactions involving intermediates that might be formed when Nafion is exposed to H_2 (or H^+) and O_2 in the presence of the Pt catalyst. We find a barrier of 0.53 eV for OH radical formation from HOOH chemisorbed on Pt(111) and of 0.76 eV from chemisorbed OOH_(ad), suggesting that OH might be present during the ORR, particularly when the fuel cell is turned on and off. Based on the QM, we propose two chemical mechanisms for OH radical attack on the Nafion polymer: (1) OH attack on the S–C bond to form H_2SO_4 plus a carbon radical (barrier: 0.96 eV) followed by decomposition of the carbon radical to form an epoxide (barrier: 1.40 eV). (2) OH attack on H_2 crossover gas to form hydrogen radical (barrier: 0.04 eV), which subsequently attacks a C–F bond to form HF plus carbon radicals (barrier as low as 1.00 eV). This carbon radical can then decompose to form a ketone plus a carbon radical with a barrier of 0.86 eV. The products (HF, OCF_2, SCF_2) of these proposed mechanisms have all been observed by F NMR in the fuel cell exit gases along with the decrease in pH expected from our mechanism
Elucidating Challenges of Reactions with Correlated Reactant and Product Binding Energies on an Example of Oxygen Reduction Reaction
Using density functional theory (DFT), Pt-based sandwich catalysts have been studied to identify a strategy for improving the energetically unfavorable O hydration catalytic reaction (O + H_2O → 2OH) in fuel cells. The challenge for this type of reaction is that the reactant, O, and product, OH, have correlated binding energies, making the improvement of the overall energetics of the reaction problematic. We screened 28 different transition metals as the Pt-M-Pt sandwich middle layer and developed a new index that specifically describes the difficulty of the reaction which involves adsorbed atomic O as the reactant and adsorbed OH as the product. This index is found to predict well the barrier of the O hydration. In order to understand how the index can be optimized, we further studied the electronic density of states (DOS) to elucidate the DOS changes for the different Pt-M-Pt sandwiches. This gives insight on strategies that might be applied to improve the catalytic reactions where the reactant and product have correlated binding energies, which is in fact a common challenge in heterogeneous catalysis
Dramatic Increase in the Oxygen Reduction Reaction for Platinum Cathodes from Tuning the Solvent Dielectric Constant
Hydrogen fuel cells (FC) are considered essential for a sustainable economy based on carbon-free energy sources, but a major impediment are the costs. First-principles quantum mechanics (density functional theory including solvation) is used to predict how the energies and barriers for the mechanistic steps of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) over the fcc(111) platinum surface depend on the dielectric constant of the solvent. The ORR kinetics can be strongly accelerated by decreasing the effective medium polarizability from the high value it has in water. Possible ways to realize this experimentally are suggested. The calculated volcano structure for the dependence of rate on solvent polarization is considered to be general, and should be observed in other electrochemical systems
Density Functional Theory Study of Pt_3M Alloy Surface Segregation with Adsorbed O/OH and Pt_3Os as Catalysts for Oxygen Reduction Reaction
Using quantum mechanics calculations, we have studied the segregation energy with adsorbed O and OH for 28 Pt_3M alloys, where M is a transition metal. The calculations found surface segregation to become energetically unfavorable for Pt_3Co and Pt_3Ni, as well as for the most other Pt binary alloys, in the presence of adsorbed O and OH. However, Pt_3Os and Pt_3Ir remain surface segregated and show the best energy preference among the alloys studied for both adsorbed species on the surface. Binding energies of various oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) intermediates on the Pt(111) and Pt_3Os(111) surfaces were calculated and analyzed. Energy barriers for different ORR steps were computed for Pt and Pt_3Os catalysts, and the rate-determining steps (RDS) were identified. It turns out that the RDS barrier for the Pt_3Os alloy catalyst is lower than the corresponding barrier for pure Pt. This result allows us to predict a better ORR performance of Pt_3Os compared to that of pure Pt
Elucidating Challenges of Reactions with Correlated Reactant and Product Binding Energies on an Example of Oxygen Reduction Reaction
Using density functional theory (DFT), Pt-based sandwich catalysts have been studied to identify a strategy for improving the energetically unfavorable O hydration catalytic reaction (O + H_2O → 2OH) in fuel cells. The challenge for this type of reaction is that the reactant, O, and product, OH, have correlated binding energies, making the improvement of the overall energetics of the reaction problematic. We screened 28 different transition metals as the Pt-M-Pt sandwich middle layer and developed a new index that specifically describes the difficulty of the reaction which involves adsorbed atomic O as the reactant and adsorbed OH as the product. This index is found to predict well the barrier of the O hydration. In order to understand how the index can be optimized, we further studied the electronic density of states (DOS) to elucidate the DOS changes for the different Pt-M-Pt sandwiches. This gives insight on strategies that might be applied to improve the catalytic reactions where the reactant and product have correlated binding energies, which is in fact a common challenge in heterogeneous catalysis
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