Fixation of powder catalysts on electrodes

Fixation of powder catalysts on electrodes
The new method developed by Corina Andronescu (centre) and Stefan Barwe (to the left of her) together with their colleagues, is potentially interesting for the electrochemical hydrogen production. Credit: RUB, Kramer

Chemists at Ruhr-Universität Bochum have developed a new method to tightly fix catalyst powders on electrode surfaces. Currently, the high physical stress induced on catalyst films by gas evolving reactions hampers the application of powder-based catalysts. The developed technique is potentially interesting for hydrogen production by water electrolysis. A team involving Dr Corina Andronescu, Stefan Barwe and Prof Dr Wolfgang Schuhmann from the Center for Electrochemical Sciences reports on this in the international edition of Angewandte Chemie.

"Catalyst syntheses often aim for nanoparticles in order to achieve a high surface area," Wolfgang Schuhmann explains. However, tight and stable fixation of nanopowders on electrodes still remains challenging. Suitable catalyst binders exist for electrodes employed in acidic media. Such binders are often deployed in alkaline environments because of the lack of suitable alternatives. However, a major drawback of using these binder materials in alkaline electrolytes is that they are intrinsically unstable and electrically insulating, thus essentially impeding the application of many highly active and potentially industrially interesting powder catalysts.

Polymer transfoms into carbon

The team from Bochum proposes a new method for tight powder catalyst fixation on metal surfaces. They utilized a specific organic , namely polybenzoxazine, which transforms to carbon at temperatures around 500 degree Celsius. The polymer was applied together with the powder catalyst on the surface of a nickel electrode and subsequently heated at high temperatures. Upon thermal treatment, the polymer transformed into a carbon matrix embedding the powder catalyst particles.

The distinctiveness was the choice of the used polymer. Polybenzoxazines are highly thermal stable and exhibit near-zero shrinkage at higher temperatures. In the absence of oxygen, they carbonize giving high residual char.

Easy to produce

"We expect that the presented method might also be applicable at an industrial scale, although this is yet to be validated. However, the necessary procedures are already well established," Schuhmann says. In principle, it is the same technique as painting the door of a car. "A mixture of and polymer could be sprayed on an , which is then transferred into an oven," the scientist says. The team at the Center for Electrochemical Sciences already tested this at the laboratory scale.

More information: Corina Andronescu et al. Powder Catalyst Fixation for Post-Electrolysis Structural Characterisation of NiFe Layered Double Hydroxide Based Oxygen Evolution Reaction Electrocatalysts, Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2017). DOI: 10.1002/anie.201705385

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