Ethanol Oxidation on Electrocatalysts Obtained by Spontaneous Deposition of Palladium onto Nickel‐Zinc Materials

Valentina Bambagioni(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Claudio Bianchini(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Jonathan Filippi(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Werner Oberhauser(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Andrea Marchionni(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Francesco Vizza(Institute for the Chemistry of OrganoMetallic Compounds), Rinaldo Psaro(Institute of Molecular Science and Technologies), Laura Sordelli(Institute of Molecular Science and Technologies), Maria Luisa Foresti(University of Florence), Massimo Innocenti(University of Florence)
ChemSusChem
December 31, 2008
Cited by 115

Abstract

Ni-Zn and Ni-Zn-P alloys supported on Vulcan XC-72 are effective materials for the spontaneous deposition of palladium through redox transmetalation with Pd(IV) salts. The materials obtained, Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C, have been characterized by a variety of techniques. The analytical and spectroscopic data show that the surface of Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C contain very small, highly dispersed, and highly crystalline palladium clusters as well as single palladium sites, likely stabilized by interaction with oxygen atoms from Ni--O moieties. As a reference material, a nanostructured Pd/C material was prepared by reduction of an aqueous solution of PdCl(2)/HCl with ethylene glycol in the presence of Vulcan XC-72. In Pd/C, the Pd particles are larger, less dispersed, and much less crystalline. Glassy carbon electrodes coated with the Pd-(Ni-Zn)/C and Pd-(Ni-Zn-P)/C materials, containing very low Pd loadings (22-25 microg cm(-2)), were studied for the oxidation of ethanol in alkaline media in half cells and provided excellent results in terms of both specific current (as high as 3600 A g(Pd)(-1) at room temperature) and onset potential (as low as -0.6 V vs Ag/AgCl/KCl(sat)).


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