Ternary platinum (Pt)-based ordered
intermetallics represent
a
group of promising electrocatalysts in energy-conversion applications,
because of their multielemental coupling that can potentially boost
the activity and durability of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR).
Yet, the achievable catalysis performance is still susceptible to
the inevitable transition metal leaching that can hardly be eliminated
in an acidic environment. Herein, we report a nitrogen (N)-modified
carbon (shell) encapsulated Pt–Fe–Cu ordered intermetallic
nanoparticles (core) electrocatalyst for acidic ORR, where the Pt–Fe–Cu
core presents a face-centered tetragonal (fct) phase. It is demonstrated
that N-doped carbon shells can not only protect Pt–Fe–Cu
cores from dissolution, agglomeration, coalescence, and Ostwald ripening
but also enable the electronic structure regulation of the central
Pt sites through the strong Fe–N coordination. The optimized
Pt–Fe–Cu intermetallic with N-doped carbon shells delivers
superior ORR activity and is more chemically stable over disordered
Pt–Fe–Cu alloy, Pt–Fe–Cu intermetallics
without a N-doped carbon shell, and commercial Pt/C, where the achievable
ORR mass and specific activities are nearly 5-fold and 4-fold higher
than those of commercial Pt/C in the acidic media, respectively