- Suppression of Hydrogen Evolution by Oxygen Reduction in Nanoporous Electrocatalysts.
Suppression of Hydrogen Evolution by Oxygen Reduction in Nanoporous Electrocatalysts.
Electroreduction of small molecules in aqueous solution often competes with the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), especially if the reaction is driven even moderately hard using a large overpotential. Here, the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) was studied under proton diffusion-limited conditions in slightly acidic electrolytes: a model system to study the relative transport kinetics of protons and reactants to an electrocatalyst and the relationship between transport and catalytic performance. Using dealloyed nanoporous nickel-platinum (np-NiPt) electrodes, we find the hydrogen evolution reaction can be completely suppressed even at high overpotentials (-400 mV vs RHE). In addition, the mechanism of oxygen reduction can be changed by using buffered versus unbuffered solutions, suggesting the reaction selectivity is associated with a transient rise (or lack thereof) in the interface pH at the np-NiPt surface. Independently controlling reactant transport to electrocatalyst surfaces at high overpotentials exhibited a surprisingly rich phenomenology that may offer a generalizable strategy to increase activity and selectivity during electroreduction reactions.