Journal of the Electrochemical Society, Vol.144, No.1, 90-95, 1997
A New Fuel-Cell Electrocatalyst Based on Carbonized Polyacrylonitrile Foam - The Nature of Platinum-Support Interactions
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) have been conducted on a new fuel cell electrocatalytic material based on a highly porous carbonized polyacrylonitrile (PAN) microcellular foam with very low platinum loading (similar to 13 to 23 mu g cm(-2)). TEM images of this material clearly show the existence of nanometer size platinum particles which are homogeneously distributed in the highly porous carbonized PAN matrix. An XPS study of Pt-loaded PAN indicates that C 1s, O 1s, and N 1s peaks shift to lower binding energies, compared to virgin PAN. It was concluded that special metal-support interaction exists, through the formation of a charge-transfer complex between platinum and pyridine-type nitrogen atoms of PAN support. This interaction leads to the enhancement of the catalytic activity, and the improvement of the long-time stability of this electrocatalyst.
Keywords:RAY PHOTOELECTRON-SPECTROSCOPY;FUNCTIONAL-GROUPS;ELECTRODES;POLYIMIDE;ADHESION;XPS;SURFACES;OXYGEN;FILMS;ACID