Article, 2024

Tailoring iridium-palladium nanoparticles with Ir-rich skin: a highly durable anode electrocatalyst for acidic water electrolysis via a facile microwave-assisted chemical reduction method

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, ISSN 1463-9076, Volume 26, 11, Pages 9060-9072, 10.1039/d3cp04284g

Contributors

Karade S.S. 0000-0002-7503-0912 [1] Sharma R. 0000-0001-5962-983X (Corresponding author) [1] Morgen P. 0000-0001-6994-9597 [1] Makovec D. 0000-0002-0190-6758 [2] Gyergyek S. 0000-0002-7325-2984 [2] Andersen S.M. 0000-0003-1474-0395 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Southern Denmark
  2. [NORA names: SDU University of Southern Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] J. Stefan Institute
  4. [NORA names: Slovenia; Europe, EU; OECD]

Abstract

Electrochemical water splitting under acidic conditions is a clean way towards producing hydrogen fuels. The slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at the anode is currently a bottleneck for commercial acceptance of this technology. Therefore, arriving at more efficient and sustainable OER electrocatalysts is highly desirable. We here demonstrate the synthesis of iridium-palladium (IrPd) alloy nanoparticles (2-5 nm) with variable average composition (Ir : Pd = 1 : 0, 1 : 1, 1 : 3, 1 : 6, 1 : 9 and 0 : 1) using a facile one-pot microwave-assisted chemical reduction method. The IrPd nanoparticles show structure- and composition-dependent OER performance in acidic media. Utilizing different reduction strengths and precursor ratios, successful alloy catalysts were prepared with Ir-rich skin and sublayers of different Pd compositions. Their structures were revealed using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and hydrogen underpotential deposition (H) studies. It turned out that (1) the alloy OER catalyst also has a high electrochemically active surface area for hydrogen adsorption/desorption, (2) the OER performance is strongly dependent on the surface Ir contribution and (3) the intact Ir skin is essential for electrocatalyst stability.

Funders

  • Styrelsen for Forskning og Innovation
  • Danish Energy Agency EUDP
  • Energi Fyns udviklingsfond and Slovenian Research Agency

Data Provider: Elsevier