Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
190647 | Electrochimica Acta | 2010 | 10 Pages |
The activity of a carbon supported PtWO3 (PtWO3/C) catalyst in the CO oxidation and CO2 reduction reactions was evaluated in sulfuric acid solution at room temperature.Cyclic voltammetry combined with on-line mass spectrometry shows that the oxidation of both saturated CO adlayer and dissolved CO on PtWO3/C material commences at rather low potentials, ca. 0.18 and 0.12 V vs. RHE, respectively. However, the low-potential process seems to involve only a minor fraction of the CO adlayer, the major part of the adsorbed CO layer being oxidised at the potentials as high as those for pure Pt catalysts—ca. 0.7 V vs. RHE. PtWO3/C material was found to reversibly de-activate upon a prolonged exposure to the CO-saturated solution due to the inhibition of the hydrogen tungsten bronze formation.The reduction of CO2 on PtWO3/C leads to the formation of an adsorbate – presumably CO – on the Pt sites of the catalyst. Although the rate of the adsorbate build-up on PtWO3/C at 0.1 V is lower than that on pure Pt/C, our results indicate that upon a prolonged exposure of the PtWO3/C electrode to a CO2-saturated solution a complete poisoning of the Pt sites with the adsorbate is likely to occur at room temperature.