Wei-Ping Zhou
Brookhaven National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Wei-Ping Zhou.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Christopher Koenigsmann; Alexander C. Santulli; Kuanping Gong; Miomir B. Vukmirovic; Wei-Ping Zhou; Eli Sutter; Stanislaus S. Wong; Radoslav R. Adzic
We report on the synthesis, characterization, and electrochemical performance of novel, ultrathin Pt monolayer shell-Pd nanowire core catalysts. Initially, ultrathin Pd nanowires with diameters of 2.0 ± 0.5 nm were generated, and a method has been developed to achieve highly uniform distributions of these catalysts onto the Vulcan XC-72 carbon support. As-prepared wires are activated by the use of two distinctive treatment protocols followed by selective CO adsorption in order to selectively remove undesirable organic residues. Subsequently, the desired nanowire core-Pt monolayer shell motif was reliably achieved by Cu underpotential deposition followed by galvanic displacement of the Cu adatoms. The surface area and mass activity of the acid and ozone-treated nanowires were assessed, and the ozone-treated nanowires were found to maintain outstanding area and mass specific activities of 0.77 mA/cm(2) and 1.83 A/mg(Pt), respectively, which were significantly enhanced as compared with conventional commercial Pt nanoparticles, core-shell nanoparticles, and acid-treated nanowires. The ozone-treated nanowires also maintained excellent electrochemical durability under accelerated half-cell testing, and it was found that the area-specific activity increased by ~1.5 fold after a simulated catalyst lifetime.
Nano Letters | 2010
Christopher Koenigsmann; Wei-Ping Zhou; Radoslav R. Adzic; Eli Sutter; Stanislaus S. Wong
We report on the synthesis, characterization, and electrocatalytic performance of ultrathin Pt nanowires with a diameter of less than 2 nm. An acid-wash protocol was employed in order to yield highly exfoliated, crystalline nanowires with a diameter of 1.3 +/- 0.4 nm. The electrocatalytic activity of these nanowires toward the oxygen reduction reaction was studied in relation to the activity of both supported and unsupported Pt nanoparticles as well as with previously synthesized Pt nanotubes. Our ultrathin, acid-treated, unsupported nanowires displayed an electrochemical surface area activity of 1.45 mA/cm(2), which was nearly 4 times greater than that of analogous, unsupported platinum nanotubes and 7 times greater than that of commercial supported platinum nanoparticles.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Wei-Ping Zhou; Xiaofang Yang; Miomir B. Vukmirovic; Bruce E. Koel; Jiao Jiao; Guowen Peng; Manos Mavrikakis; Radoslav R. Adzic
We improved the effectiveness of Pt monolayer electrocatalysts for the oxygen-reduction reaction (ORR) using a novel approach to fine-tuning the Pt monolayer interaction with its support, exemplified by an annealed Pd(3)Fe(111) single-crystal alloy support having a segregated Pd layer. Low-energy ion scattering and low-energy electron diffraction studies revealed that a segregated Pd layer, with the same structure as Pd (111), is formed on the surface of high-temperature-annealed Pd(3)Fe(111). This Pd layer is considerably more active than Pd(111); its ORR kinetics is comparable to that of a Pt(111) surface. The enhanced catalytic activity of the segregated Pd layer compared to that of bulk Pd apparently reflects the modification of Pd surfaces electronic properties by underlying Fe. The Pd(3)Fe(111) suffers a large loss in ORR activity when the subsurface Fe is depleted by potential cycling (i.e., repeated excursions to high potentials in acid solutions). The Pd(3)Fe(111) surface is an excellent substrate for a Pt monolayer ORR catalyst, as verified by its enhanced ORR kinetics on PT(ML)/Pd/Pd(3)Fe(111). Our density functional theory studies suggest that the observed enhancement of ORR activity originates mainly from the destabilization of OH binding and the decreased Pt-OH coverage on the Pt/Pd/Pd(3)Fe(111) surface. The activity of Pt(ML)/Pd(111) and Pt(111) is limited by OH removal, whereas the activity of Pt(ML)/Pd/Pd(3)Fe(111) is limited by the O-O bond scission, which places these two surfaces on the two sides of the volcano plot.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Jia X. Wang; H Inada; Lijun Wu; Yimei Zhu; YongMan Choi; Ping Liu; Wei-Ping Zhou; Radoslav R. Adzic
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2010
Yangchuan Xing; Yun Cai; Miomir B. Vukmirovic; Wei-Ping Zhou; Hiroko Karan; Jia X. Wang; Radoslav R. Adzic
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2009
Hongjun Zhou; Wei-Ping Zhou; Radoslav R. Adzic; Stanislaus S. Wong
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011
Wei-Ping Zhou; Stephanus Axnanda; Michael G. White; Radoslav R. Adzic; Jan Hrbek
Electrochimica Acta | 2013
Meng Li; Wei-Ping Zhou; Nebojsa Marinkovic; Kotaro Sasaki; Radoslav R. Adzic
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010
Wei-Ping Zhou; Kotaro Sasaki; Dong Su; Yimei Zhu; Jia X. Wang; Radoslav R. Adzic
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2010
Kuanping Gong; Wei-Fu Chen; Kotaro Sasaki; Dong Su; Miomir B. Vukmirovic; Wei-Ping Zhou; Elise L. Izzo; Carmen Perez-Acosta; Pussana Hirunsit; Radoslav R. Adzic