2013 AIChE Annual Meeting
(729g) Rhodium Sulfide Catalysts for HER/HOR in H2-Br2 Fuel Cells
Authors
Rhodium Sulfide Catalysts for HER/HOR in
H2-Br2 Fuel Cells
Jahangir Masuda, Jack Waltera, Trung Van Nguyena*,
Guangyu Linb, Nirala
Singhc, Eric McFarlandc,
Horia Metiud, Myles Ikenberrye,
Keith Hohne,
Chun-Jern Panf and
Bing-Joe Hwangf
a Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS, USA
b TVN
Systems, Inc.
Lawrence, KS, USA
c Department
of Chemical Engineering
University of California
Santa Barbara, USA
d Department
of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of California
Santa Barbara, USA
e Department
of Chemical Engineering
Kansas State University
KS, USA
f
Department of Chemical Engineering
National Taiwan University of Science and Technology,
Taipei, Taiwan
*Corresponding Author: cptvn@ku.edu
Abstract
There has been growing
interest in the hydrogen bromine (H2-Br2) fuel cell
system for electrical energy storage because of its high round-trip conversion
efficiency and low costs. The present H2-Br2 fuel cells use
platinum as a catalyst for the HER/HOR at the hydrogen electrode. While this
catalyst is highly active, it is susceptible to poisoning by bromine. Here, we
demonstrate a Pt-free RhxSy/C catalyst which exhibits
high activity and stability in Br2/HBr solution.
The synthesis
procedure for rhodium sulfide on carbon support (RhxSy/C)
catalyst can be found in the patent by Allen et al. [1]. The carbon supported catalysts
(Rh:C =1:4) were prepared by heating the precursor Rh2S3
phase under flowing argon in a quartz furnace tube for 1 hr at several fixed
temperatures. These different heat treated catalysts were tested in HBr and Br2
solutions to determine their HER/HOR activity and stability. The catalyst was also
characterized using SEM/EDX, TEM/EDX, XRD and XPS for morphology, elemental
chemical compositions, rhodium sulfide phases and particle size. Figure 1 shows
a TEM image of one of the samples.
Fig.1: TEM image of a prepared RhxSy/C
catalyst.
Reference
1. Allen, R.J, Gulla, A.F., ?Synthesis of noble metal, sulphide
catalysts in a sulfide ion-free aqueous environment?, U.S. Patent 6,967,185, 22
Nov, 2005.
Acknowledgements
The work presented herein was funded in part by the
Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), U.S. Department of Energy,
under Award Number DE-AR0000262.
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