Deuterium isotope analysis of methanol oxidation on mixed metal anode catalysts

The widely accepted mechanism for methanol oxidation on Pt based catalyst surfaces has held that the rate determining step is activation of water, and/or oxidation of surface-bound CO to CO 2. In fact on pure Pt, water activation is always rate limiting at potentials negative of 0.6 V. Anode potenti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Electrochimica acta 2002-07, Vol.47 (18), p.2913-2919
Hauptverfasser: Lei, Han-Wei, Suh, Sanghyuk, Gurau, Bogdan, Workie, Bizuneh, Liu, Renxuan, Smotkin, E.S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The widely accepted mechanism for methanol oxidation on Pt based catalyst surfaces has held that the rate determining step is activation of water, and/or oxidation of surface-bound CO to CO 2. In fact on pure Pt, water activation is always rate limiting at potentials negative of 0.6 V. Anode potentials greater than 0.4 V are outside the useful potential window of direct methanol fuel cells when using Nafion 117 at 60 °C. Enhancement of the water activation kinetics on Pt has been effected by the use of oxophilic transition metal promoters including Ru, W and Sn. For decades the search for improved methanol oxidation electrocatalysts has focused on water activation. A systematic deuterium isotope study on Pt black and two active mixed metal catalysts (PtRu and PtRuOsIr) shows that for each catalyst there is a characteristic transition potential above which the primary reaction in the rate-determining step changes from water activation to CH bond activation. On the mixed metal catalysts, this crossover potential is ca. 0.35 V, which is within the direct methanol fuel cell potential window (0–0.400 V). This study confirms that on these active catalysts there is a potential above which further improvements in water activation must be concomitant with acceleration of CH bond activation. Thus the catalyst search strategy involving Pt promoter metals must also consider the kinetic importance of CH bond activation.
ISSN:0013-4686
1873-3859
DOI:10.1016/S0013-4686(02)00162-7