Catalysis Today, Vol.114, No.4, 418-421, 2006
Characterisation of the adsorption sites of hydrogen on Pt/C fuel cell catalysts
A key component of a hydrogen fuel cell is a catalyst to dissociate dihydrogen to hydrogen atoms. In the present study, the adsorption of hydrogen on Pt/C fuel cell catalysts has been investigated by inelastic neutron scattering spectroscopy. Monitoring a clean Pt(50%)/C catalyst with low energy neutron spectroscopy, after exposure to dihydrogen at 20 K, as it was heated to room temperature, showed three distinct temperature regimes: (i) a decrease in intensity from 10 to 60 K, (ii) a rise to a maximum between 60 and similar to 120 K and then (iii) a slow fall-off towards room temperature. We assign the three regions as: (i) desorption of physisorbed dihydrogen, (ii) dissociation of dihydrogen to give an adsorbed layer and (iii) damping of the response by an increasing Debye-Waller factor. The vibrational INS spectra of a series of Pt/C catalysts prepared under varying conditions were similar indicating that the same types of site are common to all the catalysts, although the relative proportions of each site are sample dependent. Features at 520, 950 and part of the intensity at 1300 cm(-1) are assigned to hydrogen on (111) faces, in good agreement with single crystal data. The mode at 640 cm(-1) is assigned as the doubly degenerate asymmetric stretch of Pt(100) faces with the symmetric stretch near 550 cm(-1). We assign the bending mode of the on-top site to the feature at 470 cm(-1). The Pt-H stretch mode was observed at 2079 cm(-1). This is a significant result: this is the first time that hydrogen on the on-top sites has been observed on nanosized platinum particles supported on high surface area carbon black. The width of the INS peak is surprisingly large and may give additional information on the type and relative proportions of the crystallographic faces present on the catalyst particles. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:fuel cell;inelastic neutron spectroscopy