탄소 코팅 촉매의 산소환원반응 중 탄화수소 피독 저감 효과 연구Carbon-shell on PtCo for mitigating hydrocarbon poisoning toward efficient electrochemical oxygen reduction
- Other Titles
- Carbon-shell on PtCo for mitigating hydrocarbon poisoning toward efficient electrochemical oxygen reduction
- Authors
- 강병준; 진하늘
- Issue Date
- Dec-2025
- Publisher
- 한국세라믹학회
- Keywords
- Carbon Shell; Fuel Cell; Nanocatalyst; Surface Poisoning
- Citation
- 세라미스트, v.28, no.4, pp 593 - 602
- Pages
- 10
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 세라미스트
- Volume
- 28
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 593
- End Page
- 602
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63627
- DOI
- 10.31613/ceramist.2025.00472
- ISSN
- 1226-976X
2586-0631
- Abstract
- Polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) regulations are accelerating the transition of proton-exchange-membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) toward PFAS-free hydrocarbon electrolytes. However, aromatic fragments leached from these membranes during PEMFC operation can poison Pt-based oxygen reduction reaction catalysts, undermining activity and durability. Here we report a poisoning-tolerant intermetallic PtCo catalyst protected by an ultrathin carbon overlayer. Carbon-coated intermetallic PtCo nanoparticles are obtained via oleylamine-assisted annealing, forming a few-layer carbon shell. Using benzenesulfonic acid as a representative aromatic contaminant, the carbon-coated intermetallic PtCo preserves onset potential and half-wave potential under poisoning and after 5,000 accelerated durability cycles, whereas Pt/C and uncoated intermetallic PtCo/C exhibit pronounced losses in hydrogen adsorption features and negative shifts in onset potential. These results indicate that the carbon shell substantially suppresses aromatic adsorption and stabilizes Oxygen Reduction Reaction performance, revealing a tunable activity–tolerance trade-off. This protection concept offers a generalizable design rule for PEMFCs employing hydrocarbon membranes and for other electrochemical systems exposed to aromatic species.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Energy and Materials Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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