Page 73 - Book of Abstracts 2020
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8  Biannual Conference on Chemistry - CHEM 08
                                 th


                     Driving Toward a Clean Sustainable Society: Nanocatalysis
                     of Formic Acid Electro-Oxidation in the Direct Formic Acid

                                                     Fuel Cells

                         Ahmad Mahmoud Mohammad ,*, Islam Mahmoud Al-Akraa
                                                                                            2
                                                            1
                        1 Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Cairo University, Cairo
                                          2
                           12613, Egypt,  Chemical Engineering Department, Faculty of
                        Engineering, The British University in Egypt, Cairo 11837, Egypt.
                                          Email: ammohammad@cu.edu.eg

                                                     ABSTRACT

                    The desire to drive into "sustainability" and the  environmental legislations to
                    minimize the harmful emissions, particularly from the traditional combustions
                    of fossil fuels, has intensively steered research to explore clean renewable energy
                    sources. In this respect, fuel cells (FCs) technology has emerged as a potential
                    alternative to fossil fuels with the desire of fulfilling the ever-increasing demand
                    of electrical power in industry and daily-living activities. Herein, advances of the
                    development of efficient and stable nanostructured anodes for the formic acid
                    electro-oxidation (FAO); the principal anodic reaction in the direct formic acid
                    fuel cells (DFAFCs) will be outlined. In fact, the DFAFCs represent a convenient
                    replacement for the traditional hydrogen fuel cells (HFCs) in harvesting clean
                    electricity  for  several  portable  and  stationary  applications.  While  HFCs
                    experience  troubles  with  the  H2 use,  storage  and  transportation,  the  DFAFCs
                    enabled  the  direct  use  of  liquid  fuels  without  a  reformer  (a  reactor  for
                    H2 production)  and  offered  the  potential  for  enhanced  cell  performance  by
                    lowering  the  fuel  crossover.  However,  unfortunately,  the  catalytic  activity  of
                    platinum (that typically represents the anodic catalyst in DFAFCs) deteriorates
                    rapidly due to the accumulation of poisoning CO. This consumes the active Pt
                    sites, which are supposed to participate in the corresponding anodic reactions;
                    lowering  significantly  the  overall  cell  efficiency.  We  will  outline  our  recent
                    achievements to mitigate the CO poisoning that will probably pave the road of
                    DFAFCs  for  a  quick  industrialization.  Binary  and  sometimes  ternary
                    modifications of Pt nanoparticles with metal (principally gold) nanoparticles and
                    several  transition  metal  oxide  nanostructures  (e.g.,  manganese  oxide,  nickel
                    oxide, cobalt oxide, etc.) were sought. The strong adsorption of CO on Pt surfaces
                    could be tuned either geometrically or electronically, which in turns, improved
                    the  kinetics  of  formic  acid  electro-oxidation.  The  catalytic  enhancement  is
                    analyzed  by  the state-of-the-art tools  of  characterization  and  the  results  are
                    promising to sustain a future prosperity.






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