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Dive into the research topics where Enrico Pizzutilo is active.

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Featured researches published by Enrico Pizzutilo.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2017

Addressing stability challenges of using bimetallic electrocatalysts: the case of gold?palladium nanoalloys

Enrico Pizzutilo; Simon J. Freakley; Simon Geiger; Claudio Baldizzone; Andrea Maria Mingers; Graham J. Hutchings; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Serhiy Cherevko

Bimetallic catalysts are known to often provide enhanced activity compared to pure metals, due to their electronic, geometric and ensemble effects. However, applied catalytic reaction conditions may induce re-structuring, metal diffusion and dealloying. This gives rise to a drastic change in surface composition, thus limiting the application of bimetallic catalysts in real systems. Here, we report a study on dealloying using an AuPd bimetallic nanocatalyst (1 : 1 molar ratio) as a model system. The changes in surface composition over time are monitored in situ by cyclic voltammetry, and dissolution is studied in parallel using online inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). It is demonstrated how experimental conditions such as different acidic media (0.1 M HClO4 and H2SO4), different gases (Ar and O2), upper potential limit and scan rate significantly affect the partial dissolution rates and consequently the surface composition. The understanding of these alterations is crucial for the determination of fundamental catalyst activity, and plays an essential role for real applications, where long-term stability is a key parameter. In particular, the findings can be utilized for the development of catalysts with enhanced activity and/or selectivity.


Nature Catalysis | 2018

The stability number as a metric for electrocatalyst stability benchmarking

Simon Geiger; Olga Kasian; Marc Ledendecker; Enrico Pizzutilo; Andrea Maria Mingers; W.T. Fu; Oscar Diaz-Morales; Z. Z. Li; Tobias Oellers; L. Fruchter; Alfred Ludwig; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Marc T. M. Koper; Serhiy Cherevko

Reducing the noble metal loading and increasing the specific activity of the oxygen evolution catalysts are omnipresent challenges in proton-exchange-membrane water electrolysis, which have recently been tackled by utilizing mixed oxides of noble and non-noble elements. However, proper verification of the stability of these materials is still pending. Here we introduce a metric to explore the dissolution processes of various iridium-based oxides, defined as the ratio between the amounts of evolved oxygen and dissolved iridium. The so-called stability number is independent of loading, surface area or involved active sites and provides a reasonable comparison of diverse materials with respect to stability. The case study on iridium-based perovskites shows that leaching of the non-noble elements in mixed oxides leads to the formation of highly active amorphous iridium oxide, the instability of which is explained by the generation of short-lived vacancies that favour dissolution. These insights are meant to guide further research, which should be devoted to increasing the utilization of highly durable pure crystalline iridium oxide and finding solutions to stabilize amorphous iridium oxides.The proper verification of the stability of metal oxide catalysts for water electrolysis in acid electrolyte remains unresolved. Here, the ‘stability number’ is introduced to evaluate the dissolution mechanisms of various iridium-based oxides and to facilitate benchmarking of catalysts independent of loading, surface area or involved active sites.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Shape-controlled nanoparticles in pore-confined space

Johannes Knossalla; Paul Paciok; Daniel Göhl; Daniel Jalalpoor; Enrico Pizzutilo; Andrea Maria Mingers; Marc Heggen; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Ferdi Schüth; Marc Ledendecker

Increasing the catalysts stability and activity are one of the main quests in catalysis. Tailoring crystal surfaces to a specific reaction has demonstrated to be a very effective way in increasing the catalysts specific activity. Shape controlled nanoparticles with specific crystal facets are usually grown kinetically and are highly susceptible to morphological changes during the reaction due to agglomeration, metal dissolution, or Ostwald ripening. A strong interaction of the catalytic material to the support is thus crucial for successful stabilization. Taken both points into account, a general catalyst design is proposed, combining the enhanced activity of shape-controlled nanoparticles with a pore-confinement approach for high stability. Hollow graphitic spheres with narrow and uniform bimodal mesopores serve as model system and were used as support material. As catalyst, different kinds of particles, such as pure platinum (Pt), platinum/nickel (Pt3Ni) and Pt3Ni doped with molybdenum (Pt3Ni-Mo), have exemplarily been synthesized. The advantages, limits and challenges of the proposed concept are discussed and elaborated by means of time-resolved, in and ex situ measurements. It will be shown that during catalysis, the potential boundaries are crucial especially for the proposed catalyst design, resulting in either retention of the initial activity or drastic loss in shape, size and elemental composition. The synthesis and catalyst design can be adapted to a wide range of catalytic reactions where stabilization of shape-controlled particles is a focus.


ACS Catalysis | 2016

Minimizing Operando Demetallation of Fe-N-C Electrocatalysts in Acidic Medium

Chang Hyuck Choi; Claudio Baldizzone; George Polymeros; Enrico Pizzutilo; Olga Kasian; Anna Katharina Schuppert; Nastaran Ranjbar Sahraie; Moulay Tahar Sougrati; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Frédéric Jaouen


ChemElectroChem | 2016

Experimental Methodologies to Understand Degradation of Nanostructured Electrocatalysts for PEM Fuel Cells: Advances and Opportunities

Stefano Mezzavilla; Serhiy Cherevko; Claudio Baldizzone; Enrico Pizzutilo; George Polymeros; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer


ACS Catalysis | 2016

Structure-Activity-Stability Relationships for Space Confined PtxNiy Nanoparticles in the Oxygen Reduction Reaction

Stefano Mezzavilla; Claudio Baldizzone; Ann‐Christin Swertz; Nejc Hodnik; Enrico Pizzutilo; George Polymeros; Gareth P. Keeley; Johannes Knossalla; Marc Heggen; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Ferdi Schüth


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2016

On the Need of Improved Accelerated Degradation Protocols (ADPs): Examination of Platinum Dissolution and Carbon Corrosion in Half-Cell Tests

Enrico Pizzutilo; Simon Geiger; Jan-Philipp Grote; Andrea Maria Mingers; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Matthias Arenz; Serhiy Cherevko


Chemical Physics Letters | 2017

Electrocatalytic synthesis of hydrogen peroxide on Au–Pd nanoparticles: From fundamentals to continuous production

Enrico Pizzutilo; Olga Kasian; Chang Hyuck Choi; Serhiy Cherevko; Graham J. Hutchings; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Simon J. Freakley


Electrochimica Acta | 2017

Palladium electrodissolution from model surfaces and nanoparticles

Enrico Pizzutilo; Simon Geiger; Simon J. Freakley; Andrea Maria Mingers; Serhiy Cherevko; Graham J. Hutchings; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer


ACS Catalysis | 2017

Gold–Palladium Bimetallic Catalyst Stability: Consequences for Hydrogen Peroxide Selectivity

Enrico Pizzutilo; Simon J. Freakley; Serhiy Cherevko; Sriram Venkatesan; Graham J. Hutchings; Christian Liebscher; Gerhard Dehm; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer

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Serhiy Cherevko

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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