4.6 Article

Characterisation of platinum-based fuel cell catalyst materials using Pt-195 wideline solid state NMR

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 15, Issue 40, Pages 17195-17207

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp52268g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/G00367X/1]
  2. University of Warwick
  3. Advantage West Midlands (AWM)
  4. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
  5. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/G00367X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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This study demonstrates the utility of the novel Field Sweep Fourier Transform (FSFT) method for acquiring wideline Pt-195 NMR data from various sized Pt nanoparticles, Pt-Sn intermetallics/bimetallics used to catalyse oxidative processes in fuel cell applications, and various other related Pt3X alloys (X = Al, Sc, Nb, Ti, Hf and Zr) which can facilitate oxygen reduction catalysis. The Pt-195 and Sn-119 NMR lineshapes measured from the PtSn intermetallic and Pt3Sn bimetallic systems suggest that these are more ordered than other closely related bimetallic alloys; this observation is supported by other characterisation techniques such as XRD. From these reconstructed spectra the mean number of atoms in a Pt nanoparticle can be accurately determined, along with detailed information regarding the number of atoms present effectively in each layer from the surface. This can be compared with theoretical predictions of the number of Pt atoms in these various layers for cubo-octahedral nanoparticles, thereby providing an estimate of the particle size. A comparison of the common NMR techniques used to acquire wideline data from the I = 1/2 Pt-195 nucleus illustrates the advantages of the automated FSFT technique over the Spin Echo Height Spectroscopy (SEHS) (or Spin Echo Integration Spectroscopy (SEIS)) approach that dominates the literature in this area of study. This work also presents the first Pt-195 NMR characterisation of novel small Pt-13 nanoclusters which are diamagnetic and thus devoid of metallic character. This unique system provides a direct measure of an isotropic chemical shift for these Pt nanoparticles and affords a better basis for determining the actual Knight shift when compared to referencing against the primary IUPAC shift standard (1.2 M Na2PtCl6(aq)) which has a very different local chemical environment.

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