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Acceleration of non-PGM Electrocatalyst Design For Fuel Cells Through Site Specific XPS Predictions from First-principles Simulations

Proceedings article published in 2015 by Boris Kiefer, Sadia Kabir, Kateryna Artyushkova, Plamen Atanassov
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Preprint: policy unknown
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Postprint: policy unknown
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Abstract

One of the most pressing problems in the 21 st century is the provision of environmentally consistent energy technologies especially for space limited non-stationary applications. Fuel Cells are promising candidates for addressing and mastering this challenge. Alternative materials to platinum catalysts which continue to attract significant attention are non-PGM FeN x /C based materials. The understanding of the geometry and chemistry of catalytically active defect moieties is a prerequisite for the rational improvement and design of non-PGM electrocatalysts. XPS, a widely used surface analytical technique, generally shows broad N1s peaks with abundance weighted contributions from every defect motif. Due to the lack of appropriate reference materials it is currently impossible to de-convolute the N1s peak into defect specific contributions. In order to remove this limitation we have performed density-functional-theory (DFT) based calculations for a variety of in-plane Fe-N x (x=2-4) defects. Using DFT we predict, for the first time, defect chemistry and geometry induced N1s binding energy shifts in these materials. In combination with our XPS experiments and catalyst performance we find that higher FeN3 defect abundance correlates with improved catalyst performance.