Very recently, viable OH--conducting membranes were developed [2], opening the possibility to devise efficient anion-exchange membrane fuel cells (AEMFCs). In these systems the ORR takes place in an alkaline environment; accordingly, AEMFCs can adopt “Pt-free” ORR ECs and still achieve a high performance level. In this work, new “Pt-free” ORR ECs are reported; the materials comprise a graphene support “core”, which is covered by a carbon nitride “shell” coordinating the ORR active sites [3]. The proposed materials reap the benefits offered by graphene, including: (i) a high electrical conductivity, minimizing the ohmic losses; and (ii) a low microporosity, to facilitate the mass transport of reactants and products. The carbon nitride “shell” coordinates the bimetallic active sites, which include: (i) a 3d-“active metal” (i.e., Fe, Co, Ni), which bestows most of the ORR performance; and (ii) an oxophilic “co-catalyst” (Sn), which stabilizes the “active metal”and improves the ORR kinetics with a bifunctional mechanism.
The chemical composition of the ECs is determined by inductively-coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) and microanalysis; the thermal stability is studied by high-resolution thermogravimetry (HR-TG); the surface chemical composition is explicated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS); the morphology is elucidated in detail by high-resolution scanning electron microscopy (HR-SEM) and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM); the porosity is inspected by nitrogen physisorption techniques; the structure is investigated by wide-angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD), electron diffraction and micro-Raman; finally, the ORR performance and mechanism are clarified by means of cyclic voltammetry with the thin-film rotating ring-disk electrode (CV-TF-RRDE) method. The results proved very promising, clearly showing the potential of this family of “Pt-free”, “core-shell” graphene-supported ECs for application at the cathode of AEMFCs. In particular, CV-TF-RRDE measurements in an alkaline environment demonstrated that the best material exhibits an ORR overpotential ca.70 mV higher with respect to a 10 wt.% Pt/C reference (see Figure).
References
[1] F. Bonaccorso, L. Colombo, G. Yu, M. Stoller, V. Tozzini, A. C. Ferrari, R. S. Ruoff, V. Pellegrini, Science 347, 1246501 (2015).
[2] G. A. Giffin, S. Lavina, G. Pace, V. Di Noto, J. Phys. Chem. C 116, 23965 (2012).
[3] V. Di Noto, E. Negro, K. Vezzù, F. Bertasi, G. Nawn, The Electrochemical Society Interface, Summer 2015, 63 (2015).