Tianheng Du
(, ), Sijie Chen
(, ), Xianzhe Zhao
(, ), Xueheng Liu
(, ), Lifang Zhang
(, ), Xi Zhou
(, ), Linbo Li
(, ), Tongfei Li
(, ), Tao Qian
(, )
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The development of durable electrocatalysts overcoming activity-stability compromises remains pivotal for advancing anion-exchange membrane fuel cells (AEMFCs). Herein, we engineer a rare earth-incorporated Pd-based metallene (PdLaCe) through lanthanide-based bimetallic coordination, resolving critical limitations in oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalysis. Combined experimental characterization and theoretical simulations reveal that La/Ce dual-doping induces charge polarization to generate Pdδ−-La/Ceδ+ active sites, synergistically optimizing the electronic structure via d-band center downshifting. This configuration weakens oxygen intermediate adsorption while enhancing structural integrity across thermal cycles. The optimized PdLaCe metallene delivers exceptional ORR performance, achieving a record half-wave potential of 0.903 V (vs. RHE) with negligible degradation (<6%) after 20,000 cycles, far surpassing commercial Pt/C benchmarks. Integrated into AEMFCs, it demonstrates a peak power density of 82.8 mW cm−2 alongside unprecedented stability (0.8 V for 22 h). Fundamental insights into lanthanide-induced charge redistribution establish a universal paradigm for designing robust multimetallic electrocatalysts via rare earth coordination engineering, bridging critical gaps between functional optimization and industrial-scale fuel cell applications. This work provides transformative strategies for next-generation energy conversion systems requiring high efficiency and ultra-stability.
期刊介绍:
Science China Materials (SCM) is a globally peer-reviewed journal that covers all facets of materials science. It is supervised by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and co-sponsored by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The journal is jointly published monthly in both printed and electronic forms by Science China Press and Springer. The aim of SCM is to encourage communication of high-quality, innovative research results at the cutting-edge interface of materials science with chemistry, physics, biology, and engineering. It focuses on breakthroughs from around the world and aims to become a world-leading academic journal for materials science.