School of Applied Sciences, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476V, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia.
Faraday Discuss. 2013;164:199-218. doi: 10.1039/c3fd00015j.
The creation of electrocatalysts based on noble metals has received a significant amount of research interest due to their extensive use as fuel cell catalysts and electrochemical sensors. There have been many attempts to improve the activity of these metals through creating nanostructures, as well as post-synthesis treatments based on chemical, electrochemical, sonochemical and thermal approaches. In many instances these methods result in a material with active surface states, which can be considered to be adatoms or clusters of atoms on the surface that have a low lattice co-ordination number making them more prone to electrochemical oxidation at a wide range of potentials that are significantly less positive than those of their bulk metal counterparts. This phenomenon has been termed pre-monolayer oxidation and has been reported to occur on a range of metallic surfaces. In this work we present findings on the presence of active sites on Pd that has been: evaporated as a thin film; electrodeposited as nanostructures; as well as commercially available Pd nanoparticles supported on carbon. Significantly, advantage is taken of the low oxidation potential of these active sites whereby bimetallic surfaces are created by the spontaneous deposition of Ag from AgNO3 to generate Pd/Ag surfaces. Interestingly this approach does not increase the surface area of the original metal but has significant implications for its further use as an electrode material. It results in the inhibition or promotion of electrocatalytic activity which is highly dependent on the reaction of interest. As a general approach the decoration of active catalytic materials with less active metals for a particular reaction also opens up the possibility of investigating the role of the initially present active sites on the surface and identifying the degree to which they are responsible for electrocatalytic activity.
基于贵金属的电催化剂的开发引起了广泛的研究兴趣,因为它们被广泛用作燃料电池催化剂和电化学传感器。已经有许多尝试通过创建纳米结构以及基于化学、电化学、声化学和热方法的后合成处理来提高这些金属的活性。在许多情况下,这些方法会导致具有活性表面状态的材料,这些材料可以被认为是表面上的 adatoms 或原子簇,它们的晶格配位数较低,因此更容易在广泛的电位下发生电化学氧化,这些电位明显比其体金属对应物的电位更负。这种现象被称为预单层氧化,并已在多种金属表面上报道过。在这项工作中,我们发现了 Pd 上存在活性位的证据,这些 Pd 是:作为薄膜蒸发的;作为纳米结构电沉积的;以及商业上可获得的负载在碳上的 Pd 纳米粒子。重要的是,利用这些活性位的低氧化电位的优势,通过从 AgNO3 自发沉积 Ag 来生成 Pd/Ag 表面,从而创建双金属表面。有趣的是,这种方法不会增加原始金属的表面积,但对其进一步用作电极材料具有重要意义。它导致电催化活性的抑制或促进,这高度依赖于感兴趣的反应。作为一种通用方法,用特定反应中活性较低的金属来修饰活性催化材料,也为研究表面初始活性位的作用以及确定它们对电催化活性的贡献程度提供了可能性。