UPTON,
NY - Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National
Laboratory have unveiled important details about a class of catalysts that
could help improve the performance of fuel cells. With the goal of producing
"clean" hydrogen for fuel cell reactions in mind, the researchers determined
why two next-generation catalysts including gold, cerium, titanium, and
oxygen nanomaterials exhibit very high activity. Their results will be
published online in the December 14, 2007, edition of the journal Science.
Fuel cells combine hydrogen and oxygen
without combustion to produce direct electrical power and water. They are
attractive as a source of power for transportation applications because
of their high energy efficiency, the potential for using a variety of fuel
sources, and their zero emissions. However, a major problem facing this
technology is that the hydrogen-rich materials feeding the reaction often
contain carbon monoxide (CO), which is formed during hydrogen production.
Within a fuel cell, CO "poisons" the expensive platinum-based catalysts
that convert hydrogen into electricity, deteriorating their efficiency
over time and requiring their replacement.
"Fuel cell reactions are very demanding
processes that require very pure hydrogen," said Brookhaven chemist Jose
Rodriguez. "You need to find some way to eliminate the impurities, and
that's where the water-gas shift reaction comes into play."
The "water-gas shift" (WGS) reaction
combines CO with water to produce additional hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide.
With the assistance of proper catalysts, this process can convert nearly
100 percent of the CO into carbon dioxide. Rodriguez's group, which includes
researchers from Brookhaven's chemistry department, the Center for Functional
Nanomaterials (CFN), and the Central University of Venezuela, studied two
"next-generation" WGS nanoscale catalysts: gold-cerium oxide and gold-titanium
oxide.
"These nanomaterials have recently
been reported as very efficient catalysts for the WGS reaction," said Brookhaven
chemist Jan Hrbek. "This was a surprising finding because neither bulk
gold nor bulk ceria and titania are active as catalysts."
To determine how these nanocatalysts
work, the research team developed so-called "inverse model catalysts."
The WGS catalysts usually consist of gold nanoparticles dispersed on a
ceria or titania surface - a small amount of the expensive metal placed
on the cheap oxide. But to get a better look at the surface interactions,
the researchers placed ceria or titania nanoparticles on a pure gold surface.
"For the first time, we established
that although pure gold is inert for the WGS reaction, if you put a small
amount of ceria or titanium on it, it becomes extremely active," Rodriguez
said. "So although these inverse catalysts are just models, they have catalytic
activity comparable to, and sometimes better than, the real deal."
Using a technique called x-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light Source, as well
as scanning tunneling microscopy and calculations, the researchers discovered
that the catalysts' oxides are the reason for their high activity.
"The oxides have unique properties
on the nanoscale and are able to break apart water molecules, which is
the most difficult part of the WGS reaction," Hrbek said. Added Brookhaven
physicist Ping Liu: "After you dissociate the water, the reaction continues
on to eliminate CO. But if you don't have nanosized oxide particles, none
of this will work."
The researchers plan to continue
their study of these catalysts at the NSLS and CFN in order to further
explore the reaction mechanism and optimize its performance. Funding for
this research was provided by the Of |