Home / Research Articles Hub / Sulfur-anchoring synthesis of platinum intermetall...
⚙️ Engineering & Technology OpenAlex

Sulfur-anchoring synthesis of platinum intermetallic nanoparticle catalysts for fuel cells

📅 Published: October 22, 2021 👤 Cheng-Long Yang, Lina Wang, Peng Yin et al. 📖 Science 📊 853 citations
AI-Generated Summary

Atomically ordered intermetallic nanoparticles are promising for catalytic applications but are difficult to produce because the high-temperature annealing required for atom ordering inevitably accelerates metal sintering that leads to larger crystallites. We synthesized intermetallic libraries of small nanoparticles consisting of 46 combinations of platinum with 16 other metal elements and used them to study the dependence of electrocatalytic oxygen-reduction reaction activity on alloy composit...

⚡ This is an original paraphrased summary — not copied from the abstract. Full paper available at the source link below.

Key Findings
  • 1 We prepared platinum intermetallics with an average particle size of <5 nanometers on porous sulfur-doped carbon supports, on which the strong interaction between platinum and sulfur suppresses metal sintering up to 1000°C.
  • 2 We synthesized intermetallic libraries of small nanoparticles consisting of 46 combinations of platinum with 16 other metal elements and used them to study the dependence of electrocatalytic oxygen-reduction reaction activity on alloy composition and platinum skin strain.
  • 3 The intermetallic libraries are highly mass efficient in proton-exchange-membrane fuel cells and could achieve high activities of 1.3 to 1.8 amperes per milligram of platinum at 0.9 volts.
Why It Matters

These innovations can translate to real-world improvements in technology, infrastructure, and everyday tools.

This summary is based on publicly available metadata and abstract. For the full research paper, visit the original source:

Read Full Paper at OpenAlex
More Engineering & Technology Papers ← Back to Hub 📚 Learning Hub