The effect of hydrothermal treatment time and level of carbon coating on the performance of PtRu/C catalysts in a direct methanol fuel cell
Abstract
A carbon-riveted PtRu/C catalyst of high stability has been prepared by in situ glucose carbonization using a hydrothermal method (GICH). Its mode of action and its practical application have been investigated by X-ray diffraction, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, a single-fuel cell test, and by conventional electrochemical measurements. The single-fuel cell test has demonstrated that the GICH hydrothermal method has high applicational usefulness. After 100 h the maximum power density of a single cell using carbon-riveted PtRu/C as anode catalyst fell by only 12.0%, from 76.6 to 67.4 mW cm−2, compared with 28.4%, from 73.2 to 52.4 mW cm−2, for traditionally prepared PtRu/C. In addition, when the optimal hydrothermal treatment time was 4 h and the level of carbon coating was 9%, a carbon-riveted PtRu/C catalyst with a 3.5 nm carbon coating gave the best stability, with similar initial activity to traditionally prepared PtRu/C. The significantly increased stability of carbon-riveted PtRu/C may be attributed to two factors: (1) the anchoring effect of the carbon nanolayer formed during in situ glucose carbonization by the hydrothermal method; and (2) the increased content of Pt(0), Ru(0), sp3-hybridized carbon and the C–OR group composition, and the clear decrease in PtO2 and RuOxHy following the carbon-riveting procedure.