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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Götsch is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Götsch.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Enhanced kinetic stability of pure and Y-doped tetragonal ZrO2.

Michaela Kogler; Eva-Maria Köck; Stefan Vanicek; Daniela Schmidmair; Thomas Götsch; Michael Stöger-Pollach; Clivia Hejny; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner

The kinetic stability of pure and yttrium-doped tetragonal zirconia (ZrO2) polymorphs prepared via a pathway involving decomposition of pure zirconium and zirconium + yttrium isopropoxide is reported. Following this preparation routine, high surface area, pure, and structurally stable polymorphic modifications of pure and Y-doped tetragonal zirconia are obtained in a fast and reproducible way. Combined analytical high-resolution in situ transmission electron microscopy, high-temperature X-ray diffraction, and chemical and thermogravimetric analyses reveals that the thermal stability of the pure tetragonal ZrO2 structure is very much dominated by kinetic effects. Tetragonal ZrO2 crystallizes at 400 °C from an amorphous ZrO2 precursor state and persists in the further substantial transformation into the thermodynamically more stable monoclinic modification at higher temperatures at fast heating rates. Lower heating rates favor the formation of an increasing amount of monoclinic phase in the product mixture, especially in the temperature region near 600 °C and during/after recooling. If the heat treatment is restricted to 400 °C even under moist conditions, the tetragonal phase is permanently stable, regardless of the heating or cooling rate and, as such, can be used as pure catalyst support. In contrast, the corresponding Y-doped tetragonal ZrO2 phase retains its structure independent of the heating or cooling rate or reaction environment. Pure tetragonal ZrO2 can now be obtained in a structurally stable form, allowing its structural, chemical, or catalytic characterization without in-parallel triggering of unwanted phase transformations, at least if the annealing or reaction temperature is restricted to T ≤ 400 °C.


AIP Advances | 2016

From zirconia to yttria: Sampling the YSZ phase diagram using sputter-deposited thin films

Thomas Götsch; Wolfgang Wallisch; Michael Stöger-Pollach; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner

Yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) thin films with varying composition between 3 mol% and 40 mol% have been prepared by direct-current ion beam sputtering at a substrate temperature of 300 °C, with ideal transfer of the stoichiometry from the target to the thin film and a high degree of homogeneity, as determined by X-ray photoelectron and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. The films were analyzed using transmission electron microscopy, revealing that, while the films with 8 mol% and 20 mol% yttria retain their crystal structure from the bulk compound (tetragonal and cubic, respectively), those with 3 mol% and 40 mol% Y2O3 undergo a phase transition upon sputtering (from a tetragonal/monoclinic mixture to purely tetragonal YSZ, and from a rhombohedral structure to a cubic one, respectively). Selected area electron diffraction shows a strong texturing for the three samples with lower yttria-content, while the one with 40 mol% Y2O3 is fully disordered, owing to the phase transition. Additionally, AFM topol...


Chemcatchem | 2016

Rhodium-Catalyzed Methanation and Methane Steam Reforming Reactions on Rhodium–Perovskite Systems: Metal–Support Interaction

Ramona Thalinger; Thomas Götsch; Chen Zhuo; Walid Hetaba; Wolfgang Wallisch; Michael Stöger-Pollach; Daniela Schmidmair; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner

Metal–support interaction in rhodium–perovskite systems was studied using LSF (La0.6Sr0.4FeO3−δ) and STF (SrTi0.7Fe0.3O3−δ) supports to disentangle different manifestations of strong or reactive metal–support interaction. Electron microscopy and catalytic characterization in methane steam reforming/CO2 methanation reveal that reduction in hydrogen at 673 K and 873 K causes different extents of Fe exsolution. Depending on the perovskite reducibility, Fe–Rh alloy particles are observed. No signs of strong metal–support interaction (i.e., encapsulation of metal particles) by reduced oxide species were observed. As re‐oxidation in oxygen at 873 K did not fully restore the initial structures, the interaction between Rh and the perovskites manifests itself in irreversible alloy formation. Catalytic effects are the suppression of methane reactivity with increasing prereduction temperature. The results show the limits of the strong metal–support interaction concept in complex metal–oxide systems.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Preferentially Oriented TiO2 Nanotubes as Anode Material for Li-Ion Batteries: Insight into Li-Ion Storage and Lithiation Kinetics

Andrea Auer; Engelbert Portenkirchner; Thomas Götsch; Carlos Valero-Vidal; Simon Penner; Julia Kunze-Liebhäuser

Self-organized TiO2 nanotubes (NTs) with a preferential orientation along the [001] direction are anodically grown by controlling the water content in the fluoride-containing electrolyte. The intrinsic kinetic and thermodynamic properties of the Li intercalation process in the preferentially oriented (PO) TiO2 NTs and in a randomly oriented (RO) TiO2 NT reference are determined by combining complementary electrochemical methods, including electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), cyclic voltammetry (CV), and galvanostatic cycling. PO TiO2 NTs demonstrate an enhanced performance as anode material in Li-ion batteries due to faster interfacial Li insertion/extraction kinetics. It is shown that the thermodynamic properties, which describe the ability of the host material to intercalate Li ions, have a negligible influence on the superior performance of PO NTs. This work presents a straightforward approach for gaining important insight into the influence of the crystallographic orientation on lithiation/delithiation characteristics of nanostructured TiO2 based anode materials for Li-ion batteries. The introduced methodology has high potential for the evaluation of battery materials in terms of their lithiation/delithiation thermodynamics and kinetics in general.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Surface Chemistry of Perovskite-Type Electrodes During High Temperature CO2 Electrolysis Investigated by Operando Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Alexander K. Opitz; Andreas Nenning; Christoph Rameshan; Markus Kubicek; Thomas Götsch; Raoul Blume; Michael Hävecker; Axel Knop-Gericke; Günther Rupprechter; Bernhard Klötzer; Juergen Fleig

Any substantial move of energy sources from fossil fuels to renewable resources requires large scale storage of excess energy, for example, via power to fuel processes. In this respect electrochemical reduction of CO2 may become very important, since it offers a method of sustainable CO production, which is a crucial prerequisite for synthesis of sustainable fuels. Carbon dioxide reduction in solid oxide electrolysis cells (SOECs) is particularly promising owing to the high operating temperature, which leads to both improved thermodynamics and fast kinetics. Additionally, compared to purely chemical CO formation on oxide catalysts, SOECs have the outstanding advantage that the catalytically active oxygen vacancies are continuously formed at the counter electrode, and move to the working electrode where they reactivate the oxide surface without the need of a preceding chemical (e.g., by H2) or thermal reduction step. In the present work, the surface chemistry of (La,Sr)FeO3−δ and (La,Sr)CrO3−δ based perovskite-type electrodes was studied during electrochemical CO2 reduction by means of near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) at SOEC operating temperatures. These measurements revealed the formation of a carbonate intermediate, which develops on the oxide surface only upon cathodic polarization (i.e., under sufficiently reducing conditions). The amount of this adsorbate increases with increasing oxygen vacancy concentration of the electrode material, thus suggesting vacant oxygen lattice sites as the predominant adsorption sites for carbon dioxide. The correlation of carbonate coverage and cathodic polarization indicates that an electron transfer is required to form the carbonate and thus to activate CO2 on the oxide surface. The results also suggest that acceptor doped oxides with high electron concentration and high oxygen vacancy concentration may be particularly suited for CO2 reduction. In contrast to water splitting, the CO2 electrolysis reaction was not significantly affected by metallic particles, which were exsolved from the perovskite electrodes upon cathodic polarization. Carbon formation on the electrode surface was only observed under very strong cathodic conditions, and the carbon could be easily removed by retracting the applied voltage without damaging the electrode, which is particularly promising from an application point of view.


ChemPhysChem | 2018

CO2 Reduction on the Pre-reduced Mixed Ionic-Electronic Conducting Perovskites La0.6Sr-0.4FeO3-δ and SrTi0.7Fe0.3O3-δ

Matthias Grünbacher; Thomas Götsch; Alexander K. Opitz; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner

The activity of the pre-reduced perovskites La0.6 Sr0.4 FeO3-δ (LSF64) and SrTi0.7 Fe0.3 O3-δ (STF73) for the CO2 reduction to CO was investigated with special focus on the reactivity of oxide-dissolved hydrogen. This is of particular interest in hydrogen solid-oxide electrolysis cell (H-SOEC) technology, where proton-conducting ceramics are used and the reaction 2e- +2H+ +CO2 →CO+H2 O is of central importance. To clarify if hydrogen dissolved in LSF64 and STF73 partakes in the CO2 reduction, temperature-programmed reduction (TPR) in H2 , followed by temperature-programmed reoxidation (TPO) in CO2 and, moreover, temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) of ad- and absorbed species were utilized. The experiments reveal that 50 mol % of the CO2 is converted by hydrogen dissolved in STF73 and reacts quantitatively. On the other hand, LSF64 converts less than 20 mol % of CO2 via dissolved hydrogen and a residual of bulk OH is still detectable after CO2 -TPO.


RSC Advances | 2018

Structural investigations of La0.6Sr0.4FeO3−δ under reducing conditions: kinetic and thermodynamic limitations for phase transformations and iron exsolution phenomena

Thomas Götsch; Lukas Schlicker; Maged F. Bekheet; Andrew Doran; Matthias Grünbacher; Corsin Praty; Mizuki Tada; Hirosuke Matsui; Nozomu Ishiguro; Aleksander Gurlo; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner

The crystal structure changes and iron exsolution behavior of a series of oxygen-deficient lanthanum strontium ferrite (La0.6Sr0.4FeO3−δ, LSF) samples under various inert and reducing conditions up to a maximum temperature of 873 K have been investigated to understand the role of oxygen and iron deficiencies in both processes. Iron exsolution occurs in reductive environments at higher temperatures, leading to the formation of Fe rods or particles at the surface. Utilizing multiple ex situ and in situ methods (in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD), in situ thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and scanning X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (XANES)), the thermodynamic and kinetic limitations are accordingly assessed. Prior to the iron exsolution, the perovskite undergoes a nonlinear shift of the diffraction peaks to smaller 2θ angles, which can be attributed to a rhombohedral-to-cubic (Rc to Pmm) structural transition. In reducing atmospheres, the cubic structure is stabilized upon cooling to room temperature, whereas the transition is suppressed under oxidizing conditions. This suggests that an accumulation of oxygen vacancies in the lattice stabilize the cubic phase. The exsolution itself is shown to exhibit a diffusion-limited Avrami-like behavior, where the transport of iron to the Fe-depleted surface-near region is the rate-limiting step.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Zirconium‐Assisted Activation of Palladium To Boost Syngas Production by Methane Dry Reforming

Norbert Köpfle; Thomas Götsch; Matthias Grünbacher; Emilia A. Carbonio; Michael Hävecker; Axel Knop-Gericke; Lukas Schlicker; Andrew Doran; Delf Kober; Aleksander Gurlo; Simon Penner; Bernhard Klötzer

Abstract C‐saturated Pd0 nanoparticles with an extended phase boundary to ZrO2 evolve from a Pd0Zr0 precatalyst under CH4 dry reforming conditions. This highly active catalyst state fosters bifunctional action: CO2 is efficiently activated at oxidic phase boundary sites and PdxC provides fast supply of C‐atoms toward the latter.


Applied Surface Science | 2015

Preparation and characterization of epitaxially grown unsupported yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) thin films

Thomas Götsch; Lukas Mayr; Michael Stöger-Pollach; Bernhard Klötzer; Simon Penner


Applied Surface Science | 2017

Carbon tolerance of Ni–Cu and Ni–Cu/YSZ sub-μm sized SOFC thin film model systems

Thomas Götsch; Thomas Schachinger; Michael Stöger-Pollach; Reinhard Kaindl; Simon Penner

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Simon Penner

University of Innsbruck

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Michael Stöger-Pollach

Vienna University of Technology

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Aleksander Gurlo

Technical University of Berlin

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Lukas Schlicker

Technical University of Berlin

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Andrew Doran

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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