化学
不稳定性
纳米结构
纳米技术
机械
物理
材料科学
作者
Yawei Li,James L. Hart,Ramchandra Gawas,Zhiyong Xia,Pietro Papa Lopes,Jieyu Zhang,Siming Li,Yucheng Wang,Mitra L. Taheri,Ian McCue,Joshua Snyder
摘要
Coarsening and degradation phenomena in metals have largely focused on thermally driven processes, such as bulk and surface diffusion. However, dramatic coarsening has been reported in high-surface-area, nanometer-sized Pt-based catalysts during potential cycling in an electrolyte at room temperature─a temperature too low for the process to be explained purely by surface mobility values measured in both vacuum and electrolytes (∼10-22 and ∼10-18 cm2/s, respectively). This morphological evolution must be due to a different mechanism for mass transport that is sensitive to electrochemical conditions (e.g., electrolyte composition, potential limits, and scan rate). However, there have been no notable studies of electrochemically induced coarsening in nanometer-sized electrocatalysts. Here, we unveil the origins of coarsening in an electrolyte through coupled in situ experiments and atomistic kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) simulations. Our work demonstrates electrochemical coarsening is driven by two concurrent mechanisms that can be explained at the atomistic level: (i) dissolution/redeposition during the reduction of an oxidized species and (ii) rapid surface diffusion of undercoordinated atoms.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI