EP2943990A1 - Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices - Google Patents

Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices

Info

Publication number
EP2943990A1
EP2943990A1 EP13815703.7A EP13815703A EP2943990A1 EP 2943990 A1 EP2943990 A1 EP 2943990A1 EP 13815703 A EP13815703 A EP 13815703A EP 2943990 A1 EP2943990 A1 EP 2943990A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
support material
metal
material according
doped
lower valence
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP13815703.7A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Emiliana Fabbri
Ruediger KÖTZ
Annett RABIS
Thomas Justus Schmidt
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Scherrer Paul Institut
Original Assignee
Scherrer Paul Institut
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Scherrer Paul Institut filed Critical Scherrer Paul Institut
Priority to EP13815703.7A priority Critical patent/EP2943990A1/en
Publication of EP2943990A1 publication Critical patent/EP2943990A1/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01MPROCESSES OR MEANS, e.g. BATTERIES, FOR THE DIRECT CONVERSION OF CHEMICAL ENERGY INTO ELECTRICAL ENERGY
    • H01M4/00Electrodes
    • H01M4/86Inert electrodes with catalytic activity, e.g. for fuel cells
    • H01M4/88Processes of manufacture
    • H01M4/8803Supports for the deposition of the catalytic active composition
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01MPROCESSES OR MEANS, e.g. BATTERIES, FOR THE DIRECT CONVERSION OF CHEMICAL ENERGY INTO ELECTRICAL ENERGY
    • H01M12/00Hybrid cells; Manufacture thereof
    • H01M12/04Hybrid cells; Manufacture thereof composed of a half-cell of the fuel-cell type and of a half-cell of the primary-cell type
    • H01M12/06Hybrid cells; Manufacture thereof composed of a half-cell of the fuel-cell type and of a half-cell of the primary-cell type with one metallic and one gaseous electrode
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01MPROCESSES OR MEANS, e.g. BATTERIES, FOR THE DIRECT CONVERSION OF CHEMICAL ENERGY INTO ELECTRICAL ENERGY
    • H01M12/00Hybrid cells; Manufacture thereof
    • H01M12/08Hybrid cells; Manufacture thereof composed of a half-cell of a fuel-cell type and a half-cell of the secondary-cell type
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01MPROCESSES OR MEANS, e.g. BATTERIES, FOR THE DIRECT CONVERSION OF CHEMICAL ENERGY INTO ELECTRICAL ENERGY
    • H01M8/00Fuel cells; Manufacture thereof
    • H01M8/10Fuel cells with solid electrolytes
    • H01M2008/1095Fuel cells with polymeric electrolytes
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E60/00Enabling technologies; Technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
    • Y02E60/10Energy storage using batteries
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E60/00Enabling technologies; Technologies with a potential or indirect contribution to GHG emissions mitigation
    • Y02E60/30Hydrogen technology
    • Y02E60/50Fuel cells

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Electrochemistry (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Inert Electrodes (AREA)

Abstract

It is the aim of the present invention to provide a support material for applications in fuel cell, metal-air battery, electrolyzer electrodes and sensors showing relative high surface area and good electrical conductivity as well as both high dissolution and electrochemical stability. This aim is achieved according to the present invention by a support material for electrochemical applications, such as fuel cells, metal-air batteries, electrolyzer electrodes and sensors, having a composition of a semiconducting metal or transition metal oxide being doped with a lower valence element according to a general formula that is formulated as: (MY) 1-x (Dz) χO2-δ, where M is a metal or transition metal in Y oxidation state and D represents the lower valence element with an oxidation state with Z<Y and δ represents the oxygen vacancies in the lattice and at the surface of the support material. Doped metal or transition metal oxides represent best candidates as support materials because they provide both dissolution and electrochemical stability under the relevant conditions of oxygen electrode, as well as achieve high conductivity and high surface area.

Description

Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices
The invention relates to the use of novel, corrosion resistant oxide-based electrode materials for application in fuel cells, metal-air batteries, electrolyzer, and sensors. Particularly, transition metal or metal oxides in their highest oxidation state can provide high electrochemical stability, as well as high surface area when produced by wet chemical synthesis methods.
High surface area carbons are commonly used both for anode and cathode electrodes in fuel cells, electrolyzers , and metal-air batteries. Particularly, in polymer electrolyte fuel cells (PEFCs) carbon is used as support electrode material for Pt or Pt-alloy catalysts, within the gas-diffusion layer, and as a bipolar plate material. However, despite its widespread use, carbon does not represent a stable support since it undergoes to electrochemical oxidation under operating fuel cell conditions. Surface oxidation of the carbon support leads to an increase of the carbon hydrophilicity, which causes large mass transport overpotentials in a fuel cell system, and thereby a significant decrease of the performance. An even more severe degradation is caused by carbon oxidation reaction (COR), described by Equ. 1, which leads to an extended carbon corrosion and loss of the surface area.
Equ. 1 C + 2H20→ C02 + 4e~ + 4H+ vs Eo=0.206 VNHE at 25 °C Even though COR can thermodynamically occur at potentials as low as 0.206 V vs NHE, due to the sluggish kinetics of this reaction, carbon corrosion represents a severe drawback only for systems operating above 0.7 V. Regarding fuel cell systems developed for automotive applications, it has been estimated that during a fuel cell lifetime
(approximately 5000 h) at least 300.000 cycles between 0.7 and 0.9 V will be performed (The Electrochemical Society Interface 2005, 14, 24-35) . Furthermore, during the start/stop cycles the cathode can even reach potentials up to 1.5 V (Schmidt, T. J. In Polymer Electrolyte Fuel Cell Durability; Eds.; Springer: New York, 2009, p 199-221) . Therefore, under real fuel cell operative conditions carbon oxidation can significantly reduce the system performance since it leads to a drastic loss of the support surface area and, as a consequence, of the electrical connection of the Pt
particles. Complete deterioration of the carbon would finally lead to a collapse of the structural integrity of the cathode. A recent investigation (J. Phys . Chem. C 2011, 115, 14236) reported that after 1000 start/stop cycles, the porosity of a carbon/Pt catalyst layer is reduced from 40% to 5%, with a decrease of the Pt surface area of about 85%. Corrosion stability of the oxygen electrode is therefore one of the main issue to solve in order to speed up a widespread fuel cell market penetration.
In the search of more stable support materials than high surface area carbon blacks, attempts have been made to increase the degree of graphitization of the carbon support. However, even though graphitized carbon shows higher corrosion stability than high surface area carbon black, the corrosion issue is only kinetically delayed and not solved. As a consequence, several attempts have been made in order to replace carbon-based supports by other potentially more stable materials, e.g., carbides, nitrides and oxides. However, carbides or nitrates will all be again thermodynamically driven to
oxidation and formation of the respective oxides under the high oxidative conditions of a fuel cell cathode. Therefore, these two classes of compounds do not provide a better alternative to carbon-based supports. For example, tungsten carbide (WC) has been widely investigated as catalyst support due to its high electronic conductivities and thermal stability. However, WC does not provide adequate corrosion stability since some authors reported the formation of tungsten oxides only after 50 potential cycles between 0 and 1.0 V vs NHE (J. Phys. Chem. C 111, 2007,14617). Furthermore, since the synthesis of carbides is mainly through high temperature carbidization processes, this class of materials cannot provide the required specific surface area for a support material .
Indeed, for fuel cell application a good catalyst support should provide both adequate stability as well as high surface in order to reduce the loading of noble metal catalysts. Therefore, the most successful approach in developing a high surface area and corrosion resistant support appears to be the use of transition metal or metal oxides. In fact, this class of materials can achieve high electrochemical stability when used in their highest oxidation state, as well as high surface area when produced by wet chemical synthesis methods.
Apart from being resistant towards corrosion and showing large surface talyst support must also present adequate electronic conductivity to electrically connect the catalyst particles and must be able to form a porous structure.
Further requisite for application as support material in PEFC cathodes is the (electro) chemical stability under acidic
environment and up to 80°C. A recent publication (ECS Trans. 2010, 33, 473) showed that besides the oxides from the noble metal group (Ru02, Ir02, Pd02) only nine binary oxides are stable at pH=0, T=80°C and applied potential of 1 V vs SHE. Indeed based on the above mentioned study, excluding the oxide based on rare and expensive metals, the electrochemically stable oxides under the most relevant PEFC conditions are limited to Ti02, Nb2Os, Ta20s, Mo03, W02, Ge02, Sn02, Sb205, and Bi203.
Most of the work on oxide catalyst support has been performed on reduced oxides of titanium, such as the Magneli phase (T14O7) or Ebonex, which show lower band-gaps and higher conductivity than the stoichiometric Ti02. However, the use of non-stoichiometric oxides, such as T14O7 or Ebonex, does not represent a better solution than the use of carbides or nitrides. Oxygen deficient- oxides can be definitively oxidized to their stoichiometric state at the typical fuel cell cathode conditions, resulting in a catalyst support with low electronic conductivity and also poor mechanical stability. It has been actually reported that Ebonex and 14O7 have limited electrochemical stability under an applied potential of 1.6 V vs. RHE in 0.5 M H2S04 (J. Electrochem. Soc. 149, 2002, A1092) . In contrast, the same authors showed that Nb- doped titanium oxide (Tio.9Nbo.1O2) is quite resistant to
electrochemical and thermal oxidation.
Therefore, only oxide-based materials containing elements in their highest stable oxidation state cannot be subjected to further oxidation and, thus, they represent the most stable support materials for applications in fuel cell, electrolyzer, and metal- air battery oxygen electrodes.
The international patent application (WO 2010/135576 A2) claims to develop stable support based on Tii_xMx02, where M is a metal selected from tungsten, vanadium, niobium, tantalum, tin and ruthenium. All the above mentioned oxides in their high oxidation state represent n-type semiconductor (i.e. Ti is doped with an equal or higher valence element) . Similarly, an even more recent patent application (WO 2011/108121 Al) deals with the use of Sb- doped tin oxide as fuel cell cathode support; i.e. doping Sn4+ with Sb5+ (higher valence element) leads to a n-type
semiconductor .
In another recent patent application (WO 2010/033111 Al) oxide supports are claimed to be made of fluoride-doped metal
oxide/phosphate .
It is therefore the aim of the present invention to provide a support material for application in fuel cell, metal-air battery, electrolyzer electrodes and sensors showing relative high surface area, good electrical conductivity as well as both high
dissolution and electrochemical stability. This aim is achieved according to the present invention by a support material for electrochemical applications, such as fuel cells, metal-air batteries, electrolyzer electrodes and sensors, having a composition of a semiconducting metal or transition metal oxide being doped with a lower valence element according to a general formula that is formulated as:
(MY) i-x (Dz) χθ2-δ/ where M is a metal or transition metal in Y
oxidation state and D represents the lower valence element with an oxidation state with Z<Y and δ represents the oxygen vacancies in the lattice and at the surface of the support material.
Doped metal or transition metal oxides represent best candidates as support materials because they provide both dissolution and electrochemical stability under the relevant conditions of oxygen electrode, as well as achieve high conductivity and high surface area .
Preferably, the metal or transition metal oxides are present in their highest stable oxidation state as corrosion stable support at high electrochemical stability further able to provide surface areas larger than 50 m^ /g, adequate electrical conductivity and possibly also acting as a co-catalysts, leading, thereby, to an oxygen electrode material with excellent stability and activity. Advantageously, the stable metal or transition metal support materials are applied for:
a) Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) at the fuel cell cathode side; in this case electrochemical stability up to 1.5 V is required; and
b) Oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at the fuel cell anode side; in this case electrochemical stability up to at least 1.8 V is required .
In one aspect, the present invention provides porous oxide support for fuel cell operating in acidic conditions such as PEFC, while in another aspect the metal oxides are used as supports and/or catalysts in fuel cells operating in alkaline conditions. For use in PEFC, the metal oxides must provide also adequate dissolution stability in acidic environment. Considering that cationic contaminations can exchange the proton sites in the ionomer and the membrane (resulting mainly in proton transport limitations) the dissolution of the metal oxide support must be excluded .
Preferably, the conductivity exceeds the values of 0.02 S/cm measured under typical PEFC oxygen electrode conditions, since the ionomer proton conductivity in the catalyst layer can be assumed to be -0.02 S/cm at 50%RH. Therefore without becoming the limiting factor, the electronic conductivity of the oxide electrode should be at least >0.02 S/cm under typical PEFC oxygen electrode
conditions .
Most of the metal oxides of interest show semiconducting behavior, and thus high conductivity, when properly doped. Doping involves the addition of a different element into the semiconductor, i.e. substituting a group IV element (e.g. Si) with a group V element (e.g., P) or a group III element (e.g., Al) . Doped semiconductors in which the dominant (or majority) of charge carriers are
electrons are referred to as n-type semiconductors, whereas those in which holes are the majority charge carriers are referred to as p-type semiconductors.
The general formula for the claimed oxide support can be
formulated as: (MY) i_x (Dz) χθ2-δ where M is a metal or transition metal in Y oxidation state and D represents the lower valence element (dopant) with an oxidation state Z<Y and δ represents the oxygen vacancies in the lattice and at the surface of the support material. Doping a stoichiometric binary oxide with a lower valence element, for example doping a MO2 binary oxide with a D3+ element, leads to a p-type semiconductor and introduces oxygen vacancies in the host lattice for charge balancing according to Equ.2 (expressed in Kroger-Vink notation) : v_ 0 2MM x + O^ + D2O3^ 2DM+V0* + 2MO2 Therefore, semiconductors achieved by doping with a lower valence element can definitively present oxygen vacancies (δ) in their lattice and at the surface.
It has been reported that for partially oxidized tantalum
carbonitrides increasing the amount of surface defects, i.e.
oxygen vacancies, leads to an enhancement of catalytic activity towards oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) (Electrochimica acta 55, 2010, 7581) . Therefore, the development of oxide supports with oxygen vacancy defects at the surface is expected to result in an oxygen electrode with advanced properties because the support itself contributes to the ORR or interacts with the noble metal catalysts reducing the electrode overpotentials .
The metal-oxide supports used in this invention not only act as inert support, but they can also act as advanced catalysts in alkaline conditions due to the present oxygen vacancies created by the use of dopants in a lower valence state compared to the host metal oxide.
To achieve adequate electrochemical stability under the oxidative condition present in an oxygen electrode, all the elements constituting the oxide semiconductors used as support will be in their highest stable oxidation state.
As an example, binary metal or transition metal oxides such as Ce02, Sn02, Ti02, Hf02, Pb02, Ge02 and Si02 can be doped with Sc203, Y203, La203, Bi203, Sm203, Gd203, Tb203, Ho203, Tm203, Lu203, A1203, Ga203, Nd203, Yb203, Er203, BeO, MgO, CaO, ZnO, SrO, BaO, or CdO.
To achieve support oxides with high specific surface area, it is adequate to use wet chemistry synthesis method. This invention also reports an optimized synthesis and calcination method to achieve high surface area semiconducting oxides. Using a modified sol-gel method it is possible to achieve single-phase formation and microstructure control of the desired powders at reduced temperatures. Indeed, the sol-gel procedure reduces the diffusion path up to a nanometric scale, and thus requires lower calcination temperatures .
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are hereinafter described in more detail with respect to the attached drawings which depict in:
Figure 1 Thermogravimetric curve for the Bi-doped Sn02 powder
precursor (a) and the impact of different annealing times (b) ;
Figure 2 XRD patterns of Bi-doped Sn02 powders annealed at 550 °C for 2 hours (upper graph) and 10 hours (lower graph) ;
Figure 3 Pore size distribution obtained by BET measurements for 5 at% Bi-doped Sn02 calcined at 550 °C for 2 hours in O2;
Figure 4 CV curves between 0.05 and 1.6 V vs Hydrogen Reference electrode (RHE) in 0.1 M HC104 saturated with Ar, at a scan rate of 50 mVs"1 and at room temperature for Bi- doped and Vulcan X72 electrodes; and
Figure 5 ORR current densities (capacity-corrected, negative-going scans) of GC substrate, and GC-supported Sn02 and Bi- doped Sn02 thin film electrodes at 1600 rpm in O2 saturated 0.1 M HC104 at 5 mVs-1.
In the following a process is described for the synthesis of 5 at% doped Bi-Sn02 (BiSnC^) which is referred to as Example 1. Chelation of cations is achieved by adding citric acid (CA) to the aqueous solution containing tin citrate and bismuth nitrate, respectively; ethylene glycol (EG) is added later in order to polymerize the organic precursor.
The aqueous tin citrate solution is prepared from SnCl2 and CA with a CA:metal molar ratio of 3:1. Ammonia solution is added to the solution of tin citrate until a pH value of 4-5 is obtained in order to prevent tin citrate precipitation.
Aqueous solution of Bi citrate is prepared mixing Bi (NO3) 3*5¾0 and CA with a CA:metal molar ratio of 3:1.
The aqueous Bi-citrate solution is added to the tin citrate solution in the appropriate amount to achieve a doping level of 5 at%. HNO3 is added drop wise to the solution until a pH value of ~1 is achieved.
EG is then added to the citrate solution at weight ratio of 40:60 with respect to CA. The solution is kept at 100 °C to evaporate the water and once a viscous gel is obtained, the gel is heated at about 150 °C for 24h to promote polymerization reaction. a) Thermogravimetric (TG) analysis
TG analysis is used to establish the calcination temperature needed to achieve single phase materials. Figure la shows the TG curve for the BiSn02 precursor. The main weight loss of about 75% occurred between 130 and 550 °C, due to the decomposition of the organic matrix. Therefore, the calcination temperature was fixed at 550 °C. As shown in Figure lb, holding the temperature at 550 °C, after about 1 h constant weigh is observed. b) Annealing time
The annealing time of the powder precursor is an important
parameter since it can determine the crystallinity of the material and also the grain size, i.e. long annealing times generally lead to powders with larger crystallites. Two annealing times, 2 and 10 hours, have been use to produce single phase BiSn02 oxides.
Furthermore, the annealing is performed in O2 atmosphere in order to achieve oxide powders with the cations in their highest stable oxidation state.
X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis is performed to investigate the crystalline phase of the calcined oxides. The XRD patterns of BiSn02 calcined at 550 °C for 2 and 10 h (Figure 2) indicate that both the powders show a single, crystalline phase. The crystallite size of the BiSn02 powders obtained after annealing at 550 °C for 2 and 10 h are determined using the Scherrer equation. The BiSn02 powder annealed at 550 °C for 2 hours presents a crystallite size of 8.5 nm, while larger crystallites of 35 nm are obtained for the powder annealed at 550 °C for 10 hours. Therefore, the annealing time of 2 hours is beneficial to produce single phase powders with small crystallites.
Example 2 : Surface analysis by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) XPS is used to determine the chemical surface composition of the BiSn02 powders obtained after annealing at 550 °C for 2 and 10 h. The results are shown in Table 1.
The 10 h annealing process leads to surface segregation of Bi at the surface, while a concentration of Bi closer to the theoretical one (5 at%) is obtained annealing the sample in O2 at 550 °C for 2h, which therefore represent the optimized calcination condition. Furthermore, the analysis of the binding energy of the Bi 4f7/2 line confirms that Bi is incorporated with a 3+ oxidation state.
Table 1
Example 3 : Determination of the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area
The specific surface of the semiconducting oxide supports is determined measuring the 2 physisorption isotherms at 77 K, using Quantachrome Autosorb-1 machine. 10-20 mg of oxide are transferred into the measuring chamber and degassed overnight at 200 °C. The specific surface area and the pore size distribution are
determined using a multi-point BET analysis. The surface area measured for the 5 at% Bi-doped tin oxides calcined at 550 °C for 2h in O2 is 55±5 m2g_1, while typical pore size distribution is shown in Figure 3.
Example 4 : Determination of the electrochemical stability
a) The electrochemical stability under the most relevant PEFC cathode conditions is determined by cyclic voltammetry (CV) measurements. Electrochemical measurements are conducted in a three-electrode glass cell and using a rotator (Pine) to which the thin-film working electrode is attached. The thin-film electrodes were prepared from a suspension made of 75 mg of oxide, 100 μΐ of Nafion 117 and 25 ml of isopropanol. 30 ]i of the above described suspension are spin coated on a glassy carbon rod of 5 mm in diameter and dried overnight under 2 flowing. The electrode is immersed in 0.1M HCIO4 electrolyte saturated with pure Ar at room temperature and the measurements are performed using a hydrogen reference electrode (RHE) and a gold counter electrode in a three reference configuration.
Stability tests are performed over 1000 cycles between 50 mV and 1.6 V vs RHE using a scan rate of 50 mVs-1. For comparison the same test is also performed on commonly used carbon for PEFC electrode (commercial Vulcan XC72) .
Figure 4 shows the CV curves obtained for the BiSn02 and Vulcan XC72 electrodes. For the BiSn02 no new peaks evolved during
cycling. Differently, a strong decrease of the peak at about 1.5 V is observed for the Vulcan XC72 indicating oxidation of the carbon support. Furthermore, during potential cycling of the Vulcan XC72 two redox peaks at about 0.55 and 0.6 V vs RHE appear indicating oxidation of the carbon surface, i.e. formation of
quinone/hydroquinone species. Table 2 reports the charge calculated for the 25th and the 1000th cycle between 50 mV and 1 V, for both BiSn02 and Vulcan XC72 electrodes. After the stability test, the charge associated to the Vulcan XC72 CV increased of about 19% due to the formation of the quinone/hydroquinone species, while for BiSn02 mostly no change in the charge has been observed.
b) Corrosion stability under applied potential is tested holding the thin film electrodes described in Example 4. a at 1.6 V vs RHE for 30 minutes. The thin film electrodes are immersed in 0.1M HCIO4 electrolyte saturated with pure Ar at room temperature and the measurements are performed using a hydrogen reference electrode (RHE) and a gold counter electrode in a three reference
configuration. After holding BiSn02 and Vulcan XC72 electrodes at 1.6 V vs RHE a steady state current of 109 nA/cm2 (current
normalized by the surface area of the electrode) is observed for the Vulcan XC72 electrode, while for the BiSn02 the steady state current normalized by the oxide surface area is almost 1 order of
2
magnitude lower (17 nA/cm ) . The significant difference in the steady state current at constant applied voltage indicates that a further faradaic reaction occurs on the Vulcan XC72 surface, i.e. carbon oxidation reaction (Equ.l). Example 5 : Determination of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity in acidic media The ORR is determined by rotating disk measurements (RDE)
measurements. RDE measurements are conducted in a three-electrode glass cell and using a rotator (Pine) to which the RDE thin-film working electrode is attached. The thin-film electrodes are prepared from a suspension made of 75 mg of oxide, 15 mg of acetylene black (Alfa Aesar) , 100 μΐ of Nafion 117, and 25 ml of isopropanol. 20 μΐ of the above described suspension are spin coated on a glassy carbon rod of 5 mm in diameter and were dried overnight under 2 flowing. The electrode is immersed in 0.1M HCIO4 at room temperature and the measurements are performed using a hydrogen reference electrode (RHE) and a Au counter electrode in a three reference configuration.
All the potentials are corrected by the ohmic drop determined by high frequency ac impedance spectroscopy. ORR activities are obtained from the negative-going scans at 5 mVs"1 in 02-saturated 0.1 M HCIO4 at 1600 rpm and corrected for capacitive currents obtained by negative-going scan in Ar-saturated 0.1 M HCIO4 . For comparison the ORR current in the same condition has been also measured for the bare glassy carbon (GC) substrate and undoped tin oxide showing similar surface area than BiSn02; the results are shown in Figure 5.
BiSn02 shows higher ORR current than both the bare glassy carbon (which can be considered as background current) and the undoped
Sn02, indicating that the Bi doping indeed enhanced the activity of tin dioxide towards ORR. Table 3 compares the onset of ORR taken at constant current density of 10 μΑ/cm2 for the glassy carbon, Sn02 and Bi-doped Sn02.
Table3
Example 6: Determination of the electrochemically stability of semiconductor oxide/Pt electrodes
The electrochemical stability of oxide semiconductor/Pt electrodes is tested by simulating automotive start and stop cycles of an operating fuel cell. The working electrode is prepared first spin coating on a glassy carbon substrate the oxide suspension
described in Example 4. a and then depositing 50 μg/cm2 of Pt by sputtering on top of the porous oxide film. The sputtering
conditions are the same described in Chimia 66, 2012, 110. The working electrode is cycled between 0.5 and 1.5 V vs RHE for 1000 times at 50 mVs"1 in Ar-saturated 0.1 M HCIO4 at room temperature.
Cyclic voltammetry measurements are performed before and after the stability test in order to evaluate changes in the Pt
electrochemical surface area. For comparison, the same stability test was also performed on the catalyst made of 50 μg/cm2 of Pt sputtered on acetylene black (AB) carbon (surface area of 80 m2/g) . The so-called hydrogen underpotential deposition is used to determine Pt surface area before and after the stability test. For the calculation of the Pt surface area, a specific charge of 210
. 2
yC/cm for the adsorption of one monolayer of hydrogen on an atomically flat polycrystalline Pt electrode is used. The results are shown in Table 4; no significant change of the Pt
electrochemical surface area is observed after the start/stop stability test for the BiSn02/Pt catalyst, while a significantly larger decrease in surface area occurred for the AB/Pt catalyst.
Table 4
Beside the Bi-doped Sn02 support material which has been described in detail above, the following material pairs have shown best prospects for alkaline applications:
a) Fe or Co or Ni-doped Ti02;
b) Cd or Ca-doped Co203;
c) Co or Fe or Ni-doped Sn02
d) Co or Fe or Ni-doped Pb02
e) Gd or Sm or Y-doped Ce02 Further, some investigations have been made for applications in acidic environments. Suitable material pairs can be:
a) Bi-doped Ge04
b) Bi-doped Hf04
c) Bi-doped Pb04.

Claims

Patent Claims
1. Support material for electrochemical applications, such as fuel cells, metal-air batteries, electrolyzer electrodes and sensors, having a composition of a semiconducting metal oxide being doped with a lower valence element according to a general formula that is formulated as:
(MY) i-x (Dz) χθ2/ where M is a metal or transition metal in Y
oxidation state and D represents the lower valence element with an oxidation state with Z<Y and δ represents the oxygen vacancies in the lattice and at the surface of the support material.
2. Support material according to claim 1, wherein the metal oxide is present in its highest stable oxidation state.
3. Support material according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the BET surface area is larger than 50 m^ /g.
4. Support material according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the metal oxide doped with the lower valence element provides adequate electrical conductivity in relation to the desired electrochemical application.
5. Support material according to claim 4, wherein the electrical conductivity exceeds the values of 0.02 S/cm.
6. Support material according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the metal or transition metal oxides is selected from a group containing Ce02, Sn02, Ti02, Hf02, Pb02, Ge02 and Si02.
7. Support material according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the lower valence element is selected from a group of oxides containing Sc203, Y2O3, La203, Bi203, Sm203, Gd203, Tb203, Ho203, Tm203, Lu203, A1203, Ga203, Nd203, Yb203, Er203, BeO, MgO, CaO, ZnO, SrO, BaO, or CdO, selection is made under the pre-requisite of the lower oxidation state as compared to the metal or transition metal oxide .
8. Support material according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the metal or transition metal oxide and the lower valence element or its oxide respectively are prepared by a wet chemistry synthesis and hardened under calcination.
9. Support material according to claim 8, wherein a sol-gel method is applied to achieve a single-phase formation and microstructure control of the desired powders at reduced temperatures as compared to other procedures for oxide mixing and calcination.
10. Support material according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the metal oxide is Sn02 and the lower valence element is Bi; together forming a doped Bi-Sn02 compound.
11. Polymer electrolyte fuel cell, electrolyzer, metal-air battery or sensor comprising in its electrode a support material according to any of the claims 1 to 10.
EP13815703.7A 2013-01-09 2013-12-11 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices Withdrawn EP2943990A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP13815703.7A EP2943990A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-12-11 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP13150645.3A EP2755265A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-01-09 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices
EP13815703.7A EP2943990A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-12-11 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices
PCT/EP2013/076268 WO2014108269A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-12-11 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP2943990A1 true EP2943990A1 (en) 2015-11-18

Family

ID=47563192

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP13150645.3A Withdrawn EP2755265A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-01-09 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices
EP13815703.7A Withdrawn EP2943990A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-12-11 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP13150645.3A Withdrawn EP2755265A1 (en) 2013-01-09 2013-01-09 Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices

Country Status (2)

Country Link
EP (2) EP2755265A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2014108269A1 (en)

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2010033111A1 (en) 2008-09-17 2010-03-25 Utc Power Corporation Fuel cell catalyst support with fluoride-doped metal oxides/phosphates and method of manufacturing same
WO2010135576A2 (en) 2009-05-21 2010-11-25 Cornell Research Foundation, Inc. Conducting metal oxide and metal nitride nanoparticles
US20120316061A1 (en) 2010-03-05 2012-12-13 Tetsuo Nagami Fuel cell electrocatalyst

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2014108269A1 (en) 2014-07-17
EP2755265A1 (en) 2014-07-16

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Amini et al. Metal and metal oxide electrocatalysts for redox flow batteries
KR102045351B1 (en) Electrocatalyst for fuel cells and method for producing said electrocatalyst
Audichon et al. Electroactivity of RuO2–IrO2 mixed nanocatalysts toward the oxygen evolution reaction in a water electrolyzer supplied by a solar profile
JP5411123B2 (en) Catalyst for fuel cell, production method thereof and use thereof
US9099749B2 (en) Catalyst, production process therefor and use thereof
JP5495798B2 (en) Catalyst, method for producing the same and use thereof
WO2013092566A1 (en) Precious metal oxide catalyst for water electrolysis
US20070292744A1 (en) Precious Metal Oxide Catalyst for Water Electrolysis
JP5374387B2 (en) Catalyst, method for producing the same and use thereof
Li et al. Redox inactive ion meliorated BaCo 0.4 Fe 0.4 Zr 0.1 Y 0.1 O 3− δ perovskite oxides as efficient electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction
Liu et al. Mixed protonic-electronic conducting perovskite oxide as a robust oxygen evolution reaction catalyst
WO2015083383A1 (en) Electrode catalyst for water electrolysis, and water electrolysis device using the same
Wang et al. IrO 2-incorporated La 0.8 Sr 0.2 MnO 3 as a bifunctional oxygen electrocatalyst with enhanced activities
US20200147590A1 (en) Oxygen reduction catalyst, membrane electrode assembly, and fuel cell
Lv et al. Antimony-doped tin oxide as an efficient electrocatalyst toward the VO 2+/VO 2+ redox couple of the vanadium redox flow battery
GB2574943A (en) Electrically conductive material and electrode material
JPWO2011049173A1 (en) Direct liquid fuel cell catalyst and fuel cell using the catalyst
US8404610B2 (en) Process for producing fuel cell catalyst, fuel cell catalyst obtained by production process, and uses thereof
EP2755265A1 (en) Thermodynamically stable binary oxide doped with lower valence element, its synthesis and application in electrochemical devices
Audichon et al. Synthesis of RuxIr1-xO2 anode electrocatalysts for proton exchange membrane water electrolysis
KR102631072B1 (en) Method of manufacturing eletrocatalyst for oxygen evolution or oxygen reduction and eletrocatalyst manufactured thereby
WO2023063265A1 (en) Electrode catalyst for hydrogen fuel cell anode
Kanda et al. Electrochemical performance of polymer electrolyte fuel cells using carbon-free SnO2-supported Pt electrocatalysts
Audichon et al. Electroactivity of RuO2eIrO2 mixed nanocatalysts toward the oxygen evolution reaction in a water electrolyzer supplied by a solar profile
Zhang et al. Enhanced CO

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 20150629

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO RS SE SI SK SM TR

AX Request for extension of the european patent

Extension state: BA ME

RIN1 Information on inventor provided before grant (corrected)

Inventor name: FABBRI, EMILIANA

Inventor name: SCHMIDT, THOMAS JUSTUS

Inventor name: RABIS, ANNETT

Inventor name: KOETZ, RUEDIGER

DAX Request for extension of the european patent (deleted)
GRAP Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOSNIGR1

INTG Intention to grant announced

Effective date: 20160624

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: THE APPLICATION IS DEEMED TO BE WITHDRAWN

18D Application deemed to be withdrawn

Effective date: 20161105