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Mesoporous Decoration of Freestanding Palladium Nanotube Arrays Boosts the Electrocatalysis Capabilities toward Formic Acid and Formate Oxidation
Author(s) -
Ding Jia,
Liu Zhi,
Liu Xiaorui,
Liu Jie,
Deng Yida,
Han Xiaopeng,
Zhong Cheng,
Hu Wenbin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.201900955
Subject(s) - materials science , electrocatalyst , nanotube , catalysis , formic acid , chemical engineering , mesoporous material , palladium , bifunctional , nanotechnology , formate , nanomaterials , electrochemistry , inorganic chemistry , electrode , carbon nanotube , organic chemistry , chemistry , engineering
Fabricating high‐performance electrocatalysts is the most critical step in commercializing direct formic acid or formate fuel cells. In this work, a dual‐template electrodeposition method is used to create freestanding mesoporosity decorated palladium nanotube arrays (P‐PdNTA) as a bifunctional electrocatalyst toward formic acid and formate oxidation (FAO/FOR). The phytantriol‐based soft template modifies the superficial chemistry of aluminum anodic oxide inner surfaces, thereby facilitating the regulated electrodeposition of highly stable palladium nanotubes. The sacrifice of the soft template generates substantial mesoporosity on the nanotubes, resulting in a 189% increase in the electrochemically active surface area with respect to the mesopore‐free PdNTA baseline. In addition, the soft template significantly increases the density of catalytically active sites per unit area via perturbation on routine nanotube growth, as evidenced by the doubled areal catalytic activity of P‐PdNTA versus PdNTA. Remarkably, the P‐PdNTA delivered gravimetric catalytic currents of 3.65 and 3.87 A mg −1 for FAO and FOR, which are 8.5 and 6.5 times higher, respectively, than those of commercial Pt/C. These values are among the most favorable reported and benefit from the unique synergy of fast substance transport, large electrochemical active surface area and high areal population of catalytically active sites.

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