Title of article :
Scanning electrochemical microscopy of hydrogen electro-oxidation: Part II. Coverage and potential dependence of platinum deactivation by carbon monoxide
Author/Authors :
Jambunathan، نويسنده , , Krishnakumar and Hillier، نويسنده , , Andrew C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
We describe measurements using the scanning electrochemical microscope (SECM) to evaluate the reactivity of polycrystalline platinum towards the hydrogen oxidation reaction in the presence and absence of adsorbed carbon monoxide (CO). Steady-state rate constant measurements for the hydrogen oxidation reaction on platinum in a CO saturated sulfuric acid solution indicate that the platinum surface is completely inactive at potentials below 0.8 V (vs. RHE) due to adsorbed CO. Rate constant measurements as a function of fractional CO coverage (θCO) show that the activity of the platinum surface towards hydrogen oxidation is high for θCO<0.6 ML but drops precipitously for θCO>0.6 ML and becomes completely inactive for θCO≥0.8 ML. Surprisingly, dynamic tip–substrate voltammetry (TSV) experiments show that CO-covered platinum surface becomes highly active for hydrogen oxidation at potentials in the pre-ignition region (0.4–0.7 V) where the surface is completely inactive under steady-state conditions. This activation is thought to occur due to a surface phase transition between a high coverage, weakly adsorbed CO (COads,w) state that forms at low potentials and a lower coverage, strongly adsorbed CO (COads,s) state that is favored at high potentials. This structural phase transition results in the creation of reactive sites of sufficient quantity that diffusion-limited oxidation rates are observed for hydrogen oxidation in the pre-ignition region. Although, this activation was found to be transient, pulsing the substrate potential between the hydrogen adsorption (∼0.1 V) and pre-ignition (0.4–0.7 V) regions resulted in a sustained activity for hydrogen oxidation on a nominally high CO coverage surface.
Keywords :
Scanning electrochemical microscopy , Fuel cell , CARBON MONOXIDE , Hydrogen oxidation reaction , microelectrode , Electro-catalysis
Journal title :
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry
Journal title :
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry