Core‐passivation: A concept for stable core‐shell nanoparticles in aqueous electrocatalysis
Author(s)
Göhl, Daniel; Paciok, Paul; Wang, Zhenshu; Kang, Jin Soo; Heggen, Marc; Mayrhofer, Karl JJ; Román‐Leshkov, Yuriy; Ledendecker, Marc; ... Show more Show less
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The stability of nanoparticles is a major challenge in thermal and electrocatalysis. This is especially true for core‐shell nanoparticles where only a few monolayers of noble metal protect the usually non‐noble core material. In this work, we utilize the practical nobility concept to engineer stable core‐shell nanoparticles with a self‐passivating core material. Specifically, tantalum carbide as core material in combination with a 1–3 monolayer thick platinum shell exhibits exceptional stability in aqueous media. The core‐shell catalyst shows no sign of structural changes after 10,000 degradation cycles up to 1.0 V<jats:sub>RHE</jats:sub>. Due to the efficient passivation of tantalum carbide at the solid/liquid interface, the dissolution reduces by a factor of eight compared to bare Pt. Our findings confirm that passivating core materials are highly beneficial for the stabilization of core‐shell nanomaterials in aqueous media. They open up new ways for the rational design of cost‐efficient but stable non‐noble core – platinum shell nanoparticles where harsh, oxidizing conditions are employed.
Date issued
2023-01-19Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical EngineeringJournal
Nano Select
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Göhl, Daniel, Paciok, Paul, Wang, Zhenshu, Kang, Jin Soo, Heggen, Marc et al. 2023. "Core‐passivation: A concept for stable core‐shell nanoparticles in aqueous electrocatalysis." Nano Select, 4 (4).
Version: Final published version