Electrochemical stability of nanometer-scale Pt particles in acidic environments

Date Published
12/2009
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
10.1021/ja9071496
Abstract

Understanding and controlling the electrochemical stability or corrosion behavior of nanometerscale solids is vitally important in a variety of applications such as nanoscale electronics, sensing, and catalysis. For many applications, the increased surface to volume ratio achieved by particle size reduction leads to lower materials cost and higher efficiency, but there are questions as to whether the intrinsic stability of materials also decreases with particle size. An important example of this relates to the stability of Pt catalysts in, for example, proton exchange fuel cells. In this Article, we use electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy to, for the first time, directly examine the stability of individual Pt nanoparticles as a function of applied potential. We combine this experimental study with ab initio computations to determine the stability, passivation, and dissolution behavior of Pt as a function of particle size and potential. Both approaches clearly show that smaller Pt particles dissolve well below the bulk dissolution potential and through a different mechanism. Pt dissolution from a nanoparticle occurs by direct electro-oxidation of Pt to soluble Pt2+ cations, unlike bulk Pt, which dissolves from the oxide. These results have important implications for understanding the stability of Pt and Pt alloy catalysts in fuel cell architectures, and for the stability of nanoparticles in general.

Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume
132
Year of Publication
2009
Issue
2
Pagination
596-600
Refereed Designation
Refereed
Organizations
Download citation