ausblenden:
Schlagwörter:
MEMBRANE FUEL-CELLS; 3-DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION; DISCRETE TOMOGRAPHY;
DEGRADATION; SIRT; NANOPARTICLES; NANOMATERIALS; TRANSITION; CRYSTALS;
SURFACES;
Zusammenfassung:
The growth of a promising material system for high-temperature polymer-electrolyte-membrane-fuel, cells, namely, platinum-(Pt) loaded tungsten suboxide (WO3-x) electrodes, has been studied in-depth. The template-free twostep synthesis-results in highly porous three-dimensional networks of crystalline Pt nanorods on the WO3-x support. The formation, and growth behavior of these catalyst morphologies arc investigated as a function of the deposition time of the catalyst precursor by use of scanning electron microscopy and various transmission electron microscopy techniques. The analysis reveals that octahedral-shaped bulk crystals of the Pt-precursor are formed on the WO3-x support, which subsequently reduce during the thermal treatment. After a reduction time of 4 min, the core of the catalyst Morphologies is still bulk material, composed of Pt nanoparticles embedded in-a, reduced form of the Pt precursor, while the outer shell is formed by a porous network of polycrystalline Pt. Electron tomography helps to reveal the connectivity of the Pt network and allows calculation of the surface-area of a 100 nm X 100 nm portion. This is compared to the macroscopic value for the surface area of the samples' entire network obtained by cyclic voltammery.