Combinatorial Electrochemistry: A Highly Parallel, Optical Screening Method for Discovery of Better Electrocatalysts
Erik Reddington,
Anthony Sapienza,
Bogdan Gurau,
Rameshkrishnan Viswanathan,
S. Sarangapani,
Eugene S. Smotkin,
*
Thomas
E. Mallouk
*
Combinatorial screening of electrochemical catalysts by
current-voltage methods can be unwieldy for large sample sizes. By converting the ions generated in an electrochemical half-cell reaction
to a fluorescence signal, the most active compositions in a large
electrode array have been identified. A fluorescent acid-base indicator
was used to image high concentrations of hydrogen ions, which were
generated in the electrooxidation of methanol. A 645-member electrode
array containing five elements (platinum, ruthenium, osmium, iridium,
and rhodium), 80 binary, 280 ternary, and 280 quaternary combinations
was screened to identify the most active regions of phase space.
Subsequent "zoom" screens pinpointed several very active
compositions, some in ternary and quaternary regions that were bounded
by rather inactive binaries. The best catalyst,
platinum(44)/ruthenium(41)/osmium(10)/iridium(5) (numbers in
parentheses are atomic percent), was significantly more active than
platinum(50)/ruthenium(50) in a direct methanol fuel cell operating at
60°C, even though the latter catalyst had about twice the surface
area of the former.
T. E. Mallouk, E. Reddington, A. Sapienza, Department of
Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA
16802, USA.
E. S. Smotkin, B. Gurau, R. Viswanathan, Department of Chemical
and Environmental Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology,
Chicago, IL 60616, USA.
S. Sarangapani, ICET, Inc., Norwood, MA 02062, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
chemsmotkin{at}minna.acc.iit.edu (E.S.S.) or tom{at}chem.psu.edu
(T.E.M.).