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Dive into the research topics where Ted H. Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Ted H. Yu.


Science | 2016

Ultrafine jagged platinum nanowires enable ultrahigh mass activity for the oxygen reduction reaction

Mufan Li; Zipeng Zhao; Tao Cheng; Alessandro Fortunelli; Chih-Yen Chen; Rong Yu; Qinghua Zhang; Lin Gu; Boris V. Merinov; Zhaoyang Lin; Enbo Zhu; Ted H. Yu; Qingying Jia; Jinghua Guo; Liang Zhang; William A. Goddard; Yu Huang; Xiangfeng Duan

An activity lift for platinum Platinum is an excellent but expensive catalyst for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), which is critical for fuel cells. Alloying platinum with other metals can create shells of platinum on cores of less expensive metals, which increases its surface exposure, and compressive strain in the layer can also boost its activity (see the Perspective by Stephens et al.). Bu et al. produced nanoplates—platinum-lead cores covered with platinum shells—that were in tensile strain. These nanoplates had high and stable ORR activity, which theory suggests arises from the strain optimizing the platinum-oxygen bond strength. Li et al. optimized both the amount of surface-exposed platinum and the specific activity. They made nanowires with a nickel oxide core and a platinum shell, annealed them to the metal alloy, and then leached out the nickel to form a rough surface. The mass activity was about double the best reported values from previous studies. Science, this issue p. 1410, p. 1414; see also p. 1378 Improving the platinum (Pt) mass activity for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) requires optimization of both the specific activity and the electrochemically active surface area (ECSA). We found that solution-synthesized Pt/NiO core/shell nanowires can be converted into PtNi alloy nanowires through a thermal annealing process and then transformed into jagged Pt nanowires via electrochemical dealloying. The jagged nanowires exhibit an ECSA of 118 square meters per gram of Pt and a specific activity of 11.5 milliamperes per square centimeter for ORR (at 0.9 volts versus reversible hydrogen electrode), yielding a mass activity of 13.6 amperes per milligram of Pt, nearly double previously reported best values. Reactive molecular dynamics simulations suggest that highly stressed, undercoordinated rhombus-rich surface configurations of the jagged nanowires enhance ORR activity versus more relaxed surfaces.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Mechanism for degradation of nafion in PEM fuel cells from quantum mechanics calculations

Ted H. Yu; Yao Sha; Wei Guang Liu; Boris V. Merinov; Pezhman Shirvanian; William A. Goddard

We report results of quantum mechanics (QM) mechanistic studies of Nafion membrane degradation in a polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cell. Experiments suggest that Nafion degradation is caused by generation of trace radical species (such as OH(●), H(●)) only when in the presence of H(2), O(2), and Pt. We use density functional theory (DFT) to construct the potential energy surfaces for various plausible reactions involving intermediates that might be formed when Nafion is exposed to H(2) (or H(+)) and O(2) in the presence of the Pt catalyst. We find a barrier of 0.53 eV for OH radical formation from HOOH chemisorbed on Pt(111) and of 0.76 eV from chemisorbed OOH(ad), suggesting that OH might be present during the ORR, particularly when the fuel cell is turned on and off. Based on the QM, we propose two chemical mechanisms for OH radical attack on the Nafion polymer: (1) OH attack on the S-C bond to form H(2)SO(4) plus a carbon radical (barrier: 0.96 eV) followed by decomposition of the carbon radical to form an epoxide (barrier: 1.40 eV). (2) OH attack on H(2) crossover gas to form hydrogen radical (barrier: 0.04 eV), which subsequently attacks a C-F bond to form HF plus carbon radicals (barrier as low as 1.00 eV). This carbon radical can then decompose to form a ketone plus a carbon radical with a barrier of 0.86 eV. The products (HF, OCF(2), SCF(2)) of these proposed mechanisms have all been observed by F NMR in the fuel cell exit gases along with the decrease in pH expected from our mechanism.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Dramatic Increase in the Oxygen Reduction Reaction for Platinum Cathodes from Tuning the Solvent Dielectric Constant

Alessandro Fortunelli; William A. Goddard; Yao Sha; Ted H. Yu; Luca Sementa; Giovanni Barcaro; Oliviero Andreussi

Hydrogen fuel cells (FC) are considered essential for a sustainable economy based on carbon-free energy sources, but a major impediment are the costs. First-principles quantum mechanics (density functional theory including solvation) is used to predict how the energies and barriers for the mechanistic steps of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) over the fcc(111) platinum surface depend on the dielectric constant of the solvent. The ORR kinetics can be strongly accelerated by decreasing the effective medium polarizability from the high value it has in water. Possible ways to realize this experimentally are suggested. The calculated volcano structure for the dependence of rate on solvent polarization is considered to be general, and should be observed in other electrochemical systems.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2010

Theoretical Study of Solvent Effects on the Platinum-Catalyzed Oxygen Reduction Reaction

Yao Sha; Ted H. Yu; Yi Liu; Boris V. Merinov; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Oxygen Hydration Mechanism for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction at Pt and Pd Fuel Cell Catalysts

Yao Sha; Ted H. Yu; Boris V. Merinov; Pezhman Shirvanian; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Mechanism for Oxygen Reduction Reaction on Pt3Ni Alloy Fuel Cell Cathode

Yao Sha; Ted H. Yu; Boris V. Merinov; Pezhman Shirvanian; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

Finding Correlations of the Oxygen Reduction Reaction Activity of Transition Metal Catalysts with Parameters Obtained from Quantum Mechanics

Ted H. Yu; Timo Hofmann; Yao Sha; Boris V. Merinov; Deborah J. Myers; C. Heske; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010

Improved Non-Pt Alloys for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction at Fuel Cell Cathodes Predicted from Quantum Mechanics

Ted H. Yu; Yao Sha; Boris V. Merinov; William A. Goddard


Chemistry of Materials | 2010

Unraveling Structural Models of Graphite Fluorides by Density Functional Theory Calculations

Sang Soo Han; Ted H. Yu; Boris V. Merinov; Adri C. T. van Duin; Rachid Yazami; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Using Photoelectron Spectroscopy and Quantum Mechanics to Determine d-Band Energies of Metals for Catalytic Applications

Timo Hofmann; Ted H. Yu; Michael Folse; L. Weinhardt; M. Bär; Yufeng Zhang; Boris V. Merinov; Deborah J. Myers; William A. Goddard; C. Heske

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William A. Goddard

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Boris V. Merinov

California Institute of Technology

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Yao Sha

California Institute of Technology

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Ho-Cheng Tsai

California Institute of Technology

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C. Heske

University of Nevada

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Rachid Yazami

California Institute of Technology

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Pu-Wei Wu

National Chiao Tung University

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