Issue 34, 2010

Mesoporous PdCo sponge-like nanostructure synthesized by electrodeposition and dealloying for oxygenreduction reaction

Abstract

A mesoporous PdCo sponge-like nanostructure was successfully synthesized by the combination of electrodeposition and dealloying, and was evaluated as a catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction of fuel cells. The synthesized film had a sponge-like mesoporosity consisting of 5–30 nm thick ligaments with pores of tens of nanometers. Its porosity was estimated to be ca. 62%, suggesting that the oxygen transport in the film was smooth. The resultant composition was Pd93Co7, whose crystalline phase was determined to be a solid solution of Pd92Co8 by X-ray diffractometry. This degree of alloying is known to induce the most desirable lattice contraction into a Pd catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction. Actually, the mesoporous PdCo catalyst had a higher specific activity than the Pt catalyst in the potential range of <0.85 V vs. SHE, i.e., the potential range of interest for fuel cell operation. This fascinatingly higher catalytic activity was attributable to the preferable reaction mechanism, because the PdCo electrode had a lower Tafel slope (43 mV decade−1) than a typical Pt electrode (71 mV decade−1).

Graphical abstract: Mesoporous PdCo sponge-like nanostructure synthesized by electrodeposition and dealloying for oxygen reduction reaction

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Apr 2010
Accepted
10 Jun 2010
First published
27 Jul 2010

J. Mater. Chem., 2010,20, 7175-7182

Mesoporous PdCo sponge-like nanostructure synthesized by electrodeposition and dealloying for oxygen reduction reaction

S. Tominaka, T. Hayashi, Y. Nakamura and T. Osaka, J. Mater. Chem., 2010, 20, 7175 DOI: 10.1039/C0JM00973C

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