Phase Transformation during the Selective Dissolution of a Cu85Pd15 Alloy: Nucleation Kinetics and Contribution to Electrocatalytic Activity

Materials (Basel). 2023 Feb 15;16(4):1606. doi: 10.3390/ma16041606.

Abstract

This study determined the critical parameters for the morphological development of the electrode surface (the critical potential and the critical charge) during anodic selective dissolution of a Cu-Pd alloy with a volume concentration of 15 at.% palladium. When the critical values were exceeded, a phase transition occurred with the formation of palladium's own phase. Chronoamperometry aided in the determination of the partial rates of copper ionization and phase transformation of palladium under overcritical selective dissolution conditions. The study determined that the formation of a new palladium phase is controlled by a surface diffusion of the ad-atom to the growing three-dimensional nucleus under instantaneous activation of the nucleation centres. We also identified the role of this process in the formation of the electrocatalytic activity of the anodically modified alloy during electro-oxidation of formic acid. This study demonstrated that HCOOH is only oxidated at a relatively high rate on the surface of the Cu85Pd15 alloy, which is subjected to selective dissolution under overcritical conditions. This can be explained by the fact that during selective dissolution of the alloy, a pure palladium phase is formed on its highly developed surface which has prominent catalytic activity towards the electro-oxidation of formic acid. The rate of electro-oxidation of HCOOH on the surface of the anodically modified alloy increased with the growth of the potential and the charge of selective dissolution, which can be used to obtain an electrode palladium electrocatalyst with a set level of electrocatalytic activity towards the anodic oxidation of formic acid.

Keywords: alloy; copper; electro-oxidation; electrocatalytic activity; formic acid; heterogeneous nucleation; kinetics; palladium; phase transformation; selective anodic dissolution.