The quest to harness hydrogen as the clean-burning fuel of the future demands the perfect catalysts — nanoscale machines that enhance chemical reactions. Scientists and chemical engineers must tweak atomic structures to achieve an optimum balance of reactivity, durability and industrial-scale synthesis.
In an emerging catalysis frontier, researchers also seek nanoparticles tolerant to carbon monoxide, a poisoning impurity in hydrogen derived from natural gas. This impure fuel – 40 per cent less expensive than the pure hydrogen produced from water – remains largely untapped.
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Now, researchers at the US Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, in research published online in the journal Nature Communications, have created a high-performing nanocatalyst that meets all these demands. The novel core-shell structure – which is ruthenium coated with platinum – resists damage from carbon monoxide as it drives the energetic reactions central to electric vehicle fuel cells and similar technologies.
"These nanoparticles exhibit perfect atomic ordering in both the ruthenium and platinum, overcoming structural defects that previously crippled carbon monoxide-tolerant catalysts," said study co-author Jia Wang. "Our highly scalable, 'green' synthesis method, as revealed by atomic-scale imaging techniques, opens new and exciting possibilities for catalysis and sustainability."
FABRICATING CRYSTALS WITH ATOMIC PERFECTION
Catalysts inside fuel cells pry free the intrinsic energy of hydrogen molecules and convert it into electricity. Platinum performs exceptionally well with pure hydrogen fuel, but the high cost and rarity of the metal impedes its widespread deployment. By coating less expensive metals with thin layers of platinum atoms, however, researchers can retain reactivity while driving down costs and creating core-shell structures with superior performance parameters.
[caption id="attachment_8707" align="alignright" width="355"] Computational model optimised with DFT superimposed over a high-resolution STEM image (white dots). Ruthenium retains its structure with ABAB stacking sequence (blue dots) in the core, and the platinum shell switches to the distinct ABCABC stacking sequence[/caption]
The carbon monoxide impurities in hydrogen formed from natural gas present another challenge to scientists because they deactivate most platinum catalysts. Ruthenium – which is less expensive than platinum – promotes carbon monoxide tolerance, but is more prone to dissolution during fuel cells' startup and shutdown, causing gradual performance decay.
"We set out to protect ruthenium cores from dissolution with complete platinum shells just one or two atoms thick," Wang said. "Previous surface science studies revealed remarkable variation of surface properties in this core-shell configuration, suggesting the need and the opportunity to perfect the recipe with precise control."
Doubts existed about whether or not a highly ordered ruthenium core was even possible with a platinum shell – previously synthesised nanoparticles exhibited a weakened crystal structure in the ruthenium.
"Luckily, we found that the loss of ruthenium structure was due to defect-mediated interlayer diffusion, which is avoidable," Wang said. "By eliminating any lattice defects in ruthenium nanoparticles before adding platinum, we preserved the crucial, discrete atomic structure of each element."
The scalable and inexpensive synthesis method uses ethanol – a common and inexpensive solvent – as the reductant to fabricate the nanoparticle core and shell. The sophisticated process requires no other organic agents or metal templates.
"Simply adjusting temperature, water and acidity of the solutions gave us complete control over the process and yielded remarkably consistent ruthenium nanoparticle size and uniform platinum coating," said Radoslav Adzic, another co-author on the study. "This simplicity offers high reproducibility and scalability, and it demonstrates the clear commercial potential of our method."
CORE-SHELL CHARACTERISATION
"We took the completed catalysts to other facilities here at the Lab to reveal the exact details of the atomic structure," Wang said. "This kind of rapid collaboration is only possible when you work right next door to world-class experts and instruments."
Scientists at Brookhaven Lab's National Synchrotron Light Source revealed the atomic density, distribution and uniformity of the metals in the nanocatalysts using a technique called x-ray diffraction, where high-frequency light scatters and bends after interacting with individual atoms. The collaboration also used a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) to pinpoint the different sub-nanometer atomic patterns. With this instrument, a focused beam of electrons bombarded the particles, creating a map of both the core and shell structures.
"We found that the elements did not mix at the core-shell boundary, which is a critical stride," said Dong Su, co-author and STEM specialist. "The atomic ordering in each element, coupled with the right theoretical models, tells us about how and why the new nanocatalyst works its magic."
Determining the ideal functional configuration for the core and shell also required the use of the researchers' expertise in computational science. With density functional theory (DFT) calculations, the computer helps identify the most energetically stable platinum-ruthenium structure.
"The DFT analysis connects the dots between performance and configuration, and it corroborates our direct observations from x-ray diffraction and electron microscopy," Adzic said.
DISCOVERY TO DEPLOYMENT
Ballard Power Systems, a company dedicated to fuel cells production, independently evaluated the performance of the new core-shell nanocatalysts. Beyond testing the low-platinum catalysts' high activity in pure hydrogen, Ballard looked specifically at the resistance to carbon monoxide present in impure hydrogen gas and the dissolution resistance during startup/shutdown cycles. The bilayer nanocatalyst exhibited high durability and enhanced carbon monoxide tolerance—the combination enables the use of impure hydrogen without much loss in efficiency or increase in catalyst cost.
The nanocatalyst also performed well in producing hydrogen gas through the hydrogen evolution reaction, leading to another industrial partnership. Proton Onsite, a company specialising in splitting hydrogen from water and other similar processes, has completed feasibility tests for deploying the technology in their production of water electrolysers, which will now require about 98 per cent less platinum.
"Water electrolysers are already on the market, so this nanocatalyst can deploy quickly," Wang said. "When hydrogen fuel cell vehicles roll out in the coming years, this new structure may accelerate development by driving down costs for both metal catalysts and fuel."
The above story is based on materials provided by Brookhaven National Laboratory.