Carbon Nanotube-Graphene Supported Bimetallic Electrocatalyst for Direct Borohydride Hydrogen Peroxide Fuel Cells

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2021

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Energy Systems Engineering
(2009)
The Department of Energy Systems Engineering admitted its first students and started education in the academic year of 2009-2010 under Atılım University School of Engineering. In this Department, all kinds of energy are presented in modules (conventional energy, renewable energy, hydrogen energy, bio-energy, nuclear energy, energy planning and management) from their detection, production and procession; to their transfer and distribution. A need is to arise for a surge of energy systems engineers to ensure energy supply security and solve environmental issues as the most important problems of the fifty years to come. In addition, Energy Systems Engineering is becoming among the most important professions required in our country and worldwide, especially within the framework of the European Union harmonization process, and within the free market economy.

Journal Issue

Events

Abstract

At present study, carbon nanotube-graphene (CNT-G) supported PtAu, Au and Pt catalysts were prepared by microwave-assisted synthesis method to investigate the direct liquid-fed sodium borohydride/hydrogen peroxide (NaBH4/H2O2) fuel cell performance. Prepared catalysts were characterized by TGA, XRD, TEM, ICP-OES, cyclic voltammetry and rotating disc electrode (RDE) voltammetry. The catalysts were tested in a single NaBH4/H2O2 fuel cell with 25 cm(2) active area to evaluate fuel cell performance. The effects of temperature and fuel concentration on fuel cell performance were examined to observed best operating conditions. As a result of direct NaBH4/H2O2 fuel cell experiments, maximum power densities of 139 mW/cm(2), 125 mW/cm(2) and 113 mW/cm(2) were obtained for PtAu/CNT-G, Au/CNT-G and Pt/CNT-G catalysts, respectively. PtAu/CNT-G catalyst showed the enhanced NaBH4/H2O2 fuel cell performance, which was higher than the Pt/CNT-G catalyst and Au/CNT-G catalyst at 50 degrees C. The enhanced NaBH4/H2O2 performance can be attributed to synergistic effects between Pt and Au particles on CNT-G support providing a better catalyst utilization and interaction. These results suggest that the prepared PtAu/CNT-G catalyst is a promising anode catalyst for NaBH4/H2O2 fuel cell application. (c) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Description

DEVRIM, YILSER/0000-0001-8430-0702; UZUNDURUKAN, ARIFE/0000-0003-1104-1644

Keywords

Direct borohydride-hydrogen peroxide fuel cell, Bimetallic catalyst, Hydrogen peroxide, Sodium borohydride, Liquid fuels fuel cell

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Source

Volume

172

Issue

Start Page

1351

End Page

1364

Collections