Biobutanol as fuel for direct alcohol fuel cells—investigation of Sn-modified Pt catalyst for butanol electro-oxidation
Biobutanol as fuel for direct alcohol fuel cells—investigation of Sn-modified Pt catalyst for butanol electro-oxidation
Direct alcohol fuel cells (DAFCs) mostly use low molecular weight alcohols such as methanol and ethanol as fuels. However, short-chain alcohol molecules have a relative high membrane crossover rate in DAFCs and a low energy density. Long chain alcohols such as butanol have a higher energy density, as well as a lower membrane crossover rate compared to methanol and ethanol. Although a significant number of studies have been dedicated to low molecular weight alcohols in DAFCs, very few studies are available for longer chain alcohols such as butanol. A significant development in the production of biobutanol and its proposed application as an alternative fuel to gasoline in the past decade makes butanol an interesting candidate fuel for fuel cells. Different butanol isomers were compared in this study on various Pt and PtSn bimetallic catalysts for their electro-oxidation activities in acidic media. Clear distinctive behaviors were observed for each of the different butanol isomers using cyclic voltammetry (CV), indicating a difference in activity and the mechanism of oxidation. The voltammograms of both n-butanol and iso-butanol showed similar characteristic features, indicating a similar reaction mechanism, whereas 2-butanol showed completely different features; for example, it did not show any indication of poisoning. Ter-butanol was found to be inactive for oxidation on Pt. In situ FTIR and CV analysis showed that OHads was essential for the oxidation of primary butanol isomers which only forms at high potentials on Pt. In order to enhance the water oxidation and produce OHads at lower potentials, Pt was modified by the oxophilic metal Sn and the bimetallic PtSn was studied for the oxidation of butanol isomers. A significant enhancement in the oxidation of the 1° butanol isomers was observed on addition of Sn to the Pt, resulting in an oxidation peak at a potential ?520 mV lower than that found on pure Pt. The higher activity of PtSn was attributed to the bifunctional mechanism on PtSn catalyst. The positive influence of Sn was also confirmed in the PtSn nanoparticle catalyst prepared by the modification of commercial Pt/C nanoparticle and a higher activity was observed for PtSn (3:1) composition. The temperature-dependent data showed that the activation energy for butanol oxidation reaction over PtSn/C is lower than that over Pt/C.
12859-12870
Puthiyapura, Vinod Kumar
4787348f-d97a-4288-a9a7-b0c61866f823
Brett, Dan J. L.
652e18b5-dad8-4dc4-bed4-9810052ad27b
Russell, Andrea E.
b6b7c748-efc1-4d5d-8a7a-8e4b69396169
Lin, Wen-Feng
f8c1c1b5-1bef-41e7-959e-d80429abd13c
Hardacre, Christopher
0715f59a-c82e-4844-a9f8-6a06fb36320f
25 May 2016
Puthiyapura, Vinod Kumar
4787348f-d97a-4288-a9a7-b0c61866f823
Brett, Dan J. L.
652e18b5-dad8-4dc4-bed4-9810052ad27b
Russell, Andrea E.
b6b7c748-efc1-4d5d-8a7a-8e4b69396169
Lin, Wen-Feng
f8c1c1b5-1bef-41e7-959e-d80429abd13c
Hardacre, Christopher
0715f59a-c82e-4844-a9f8-6a06fb36320f
Puthiyapura, Vinod Kumar, Brett, Dan J. L., Russell, Andrea E., Lin, Wen-Feng and Hardacre, Christopher
(2016)
Biobutanol as fuel for direct alcohol fuel cells—investigation of Sn-modified Pt catalyst for butanol electro-oxidation.
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 8 (20), .
(doi:10.1021/acsami.6b02863).
Abstract
Direct alcohol fuel cells (DAFCs) mostly use low molecular weight alcohols such as methanol and ethanol as fuels. However, short-chain alcohol molecules have a relative high membrane crossover rate in DAFCs and a low energy density. Long chain alcohols such as butanol have a higher energy density, as well as a lower membrane crossover rate compared to methanol and ethanol. Although a significant number of studies have been dedicated to low molecular weight alcohols in DAFCs, very few studies are available for longer chain alcohols such as butanol. A significant development in the production of biobutanol and its proposed application as an alternative fuel to gasoline in the past decade makes butanol an interesting candidate fuel for fuel cells. Different butanol isomers were compared in this study on various Pt and PtSn bimetallic catalysts for their electro-oxidation activities in acidic media. Clear distinctive behaviors were observed for each of the different butanol isomers using cyclic voltammetry (CV), indicating a difference in activity and the mechanism of oxidation. The voltammograms of both n-butanol and iso-butanol showed similar characteristic features, indicating a similar reaction mechanism, whereas 2-butanol showed completely different features; for example, it did not show any indication of poisoning. Ter-butanol was found to be inactive for oxidation on Pt. In situ FTIR and CV analysis showed that OHads was essential for the oxidation of primary butanol isomers which only forms at high potentials on Pt. In order to enhance the water oxidation and produce OHads at lower potentials, Pt was modified by the oxophilic metal Sn and the bimetallic PtSn was studied for the oxidation of butanol isomers. A significant enhancement in the oxidation of the 1° butanol isomers was observed on addition of Sn to the Pt, resulting in an oxidation peak at a potential ?520 mV lower than that found on pure Pt. The higher activity of PtSn was attributed to the bifunctional mechanism on PtSn catalyst. The positive influence of Sn was also confirmed in the PtSn nanoparticle catalyst prepared by the modification of commercial Pt/C nanoparticle and a higher activity was observed for PtSn (3:1) composition. The temperature-dependent data showed that the activation energy for butanol oxidation reaction over PtSn/C is lower than that over Pt/C.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 May 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 May 2016
Published date: 25 May 2016
Organisations:
Electrochemistry
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 399921
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/399921
ISSN: 1944-8244
PURE UUID: 518c69e6-0ae9-49d7-a29c-070e310e5bdc
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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2016 12:17
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 02:36
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Author:
Vinod Kumar Puthiyapura
Author:
Dan J. L. Brett
Author:
Wen-Feng Lin
Author:
Christopher Hardacre
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