Interface of Hydrated Perfluorosulfonic Acid Electrolyte with a Platinum Catalyst: Structural Analyses with Dissipative Particle Dynamics Simulations

POSTER

Abstract

Dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) simulations were performed to study structures of hydrated perfluorosufuonic acids (PFSA) in contact with platinum surfaces. Two types of interfacial systems were simulated, where PFSA molecules interact with a cube and a slab of platinum, respectively representing a small catalyst particle used in a regular fuel cell and a platinum substrate popularly used in a model system experiment. The calculated results suggest that the two systems form a shell structure and a layer structure, respectively, of PFSA components near the platinum surfaces. The water component covers the platinum surfaces popularly in both systems, of which the coverage depends on the hydration levels of PFSA. Detailed analyses revealed that the water component networks are quite different in the two systems, which are three-dimensionally connected in the systems with a platinum cube, while disrupted by hydrophobic components in the systems with a platinum slab.

*This work was partly supported by MEXT within the priority issue 6 of the FLAGSHIP2020 project (Project ID: hp160226, hp170253, hp180187, and hp190178). The calculations were primarily performed on NIMS super computer and K-computer.

Presenters

  • Nobuo Tajima

    • MANA, National Institute for Materials Science

Authors

  • Nobuo Tajima

    • MANA, National Institute for Materials Science
  • Jun Nara

    • International Center for Materials Nanoarchitechtonics, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute for Materials Science
    • MANA, National Institute for Materials Science
  • Taku Ozawa

    • Engineering Technology Division, JSOL Corporation
  • Hiroya Nitta

    • Engineering Technology Division, JSOL Corporation
  • Kosuke Ohata

    • Engineering Technology Division, JSOL Corporation
  • Takahisa Ohno

    • International Center for Materials Nanoarchitechtonics, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute for Materials Science
    • MANA, National Institute for Materials Science