Temperature-Dependent Kinetics and Reaction Mechanism of Ammonia Oxidation on Pt, Ir, and PtIr Alloy Catalysts

by Song, L.; Liang, Z. X.; Ma, Z.; Zhang, Y.; Chen, J. Y.; Adzic, R. R.; Wang, J. X.

We report here a kinetic study of ammonia oxidation reaction (AOR) on carbon supported Pt, Ir, and PtIr (1:1) alloy catalysts using gas diffusion electrodes in 1 M KOH solution at temperatures up to 60 degrees C. Ammonia concentration was kept constant by letting Ar gas bubbling through concentrated ammonia solution before entering the cell. At 0.5 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode, the currents normalized to the mass of platinum group metals are in the order of PtIr > Ir > Pt. Compared to Pt, Ir exhibited higher activity enhancement with increasing temperature, lower onset potential, and lower peak current. In correlation with previous theoretical studies, these differences are ascribed to Ir having lower activation barrier for the first one-electron deprotonation of NH3 to NH2*, but higher barrier for dimerization of two NH2* to N2H4*. The AOR current peaks at high potentials because the rate is limited by the potential-independent dimerization and formation of inactive N* that blocks the active surface. Below peak potentials, gradual deactivation occurs due to the accumulation of NH* that is harder to be dimerized than NH2*. PtIr alloy combines the virtues of Ir and Pt exhibiting the widest active potential window and the highest peak current.

Journal
Journal of the Electrochemical Society
Volume
165
Issue
15
Year
2018
Start Page
J3095-J3100
URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1149/2.0181815jes
ISBN/ISSN
1945-7111; 0013-4651
DOI
10.1149/2.0181815jes