DOPANT ALLOYING OF TITANIUM TO SUPPRESS OXYGEN REDUCTION CATALYSIS
20210102274 ยท 2021-04-08
Assignee
Inventors
- Steve Policastro (Waldorf, MD, US)
- Derek Horton (Alexandria, VA, US)
- Carlos Hangarter (Alexandria, VA, US)
- James A. Wollmershauser (Alexandria, VA, US)
- Rachel Anderson (Alexandria, VA, US)
Cpc classification
F16B33/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
An alloy having the formula Ti.sub.1-xM.sub.x. M is Co, Sn, Cr, or a combination. The value x is from 0.001 to 0.02. A method of combining titanium metal and a dopant metal to form the alloy.
Claims
1. A method comprising: providing an article comprising: a composition comprising: an alloy having the formula Ti.sub.1-xM.sub.x; wherein M is a dopant selected from Co, Sn, Cr, and combinations thereof; and wherein x is from 0.001 to 0.02; and an oxide of the alloy comprising the dopant on a surface of the article; positioning the article in electrical contact with a metal component; and positioning the article in contact with an electrolyte that is in contact with the metal component; wherein the metal component has a lower electrode potential in the electrolyte than titanium.
2. The method of claim 1; wherein M is Co, Sn, or Cr; and wherein x is from 0.005 to 0.015.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the composition comprises at least 90 wt % of the alloy.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the composition comprises at least 99 wt % of the alloy.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the article is a fastener.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] A more complete appreciation will be readily obtained by reference to the following Description of the Example Embodiments and the accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0034] In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present disclosure. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the present subject matter may be practiced in other embodiments that depart from these specific details. In other instances, detailed descriptions of well-known methods and devices are omitted so as to not obscure the present disclosure with unnecessary detail.
[0035] Disclosed is a method to alter the electronic structure of the native oxides formed on titanium by doping (alloying in low concentrations) with specific elements, such as chromium and tin, in order to disrupt the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and inhibit corrosion in galvanic couples with these doped alloys.
[0036] Many structural aircraft alloys, such as AA2024 and AA7075, have stable, corrosion resistant oxides. However, corrosion damage is frequently seen in areas that are near galvanic contacts between the aluminum alloys and fasteners made of titanium or steel alloys. The fastener material, which is more noble than the aluminum, catalyzes the reduction reaction from species present in the electrolyte and drives oxidation in the structural alloy.
[0037] The corrosion rate of the more active material is strongly influenced by the exposed surface area of the cathode and by the ability of the noble material to support a suitable reduction reaction such as hydrogen evolution or oxygen reduction. These two reduction reaction rates are themselves influenced by the concentrations of the reacting species in the electrolyte and by the catalytic properties of the material surface. Of particular interest are metal oxides in which the oxide microstructure plays a role in affecting the kinetics of the reduction reactions.
[0038] The protective oxide that forms on titanium is of interest because it is thermodynamically stable up to +1.5 V.sub.SHE (+1.25 V.sub.SCE) at pH 12 (Pourbaix, Atlas of Electrochemical Equilibria in Aqueous Solutions, Houston: NACE, 1974). For the alkaline conditions expected when acting as the noble material in a galvanic couple, the electrochemical properties of the oxide dominate the metal's cathodic behavior. In an alkaline environment, both oxygen reduction and the hydrogen evolution reactions are expected to be catalyzed on the oxide.
[0039]
[0040] This framework raises the question to what extent the electrons scattered into the conduction band can be trapped or disrupted from crossing the oxide-electrolyte interface and thereby prevented from participating in reduction reactions. As an example, some microstructural defects in titanium oxide are known to act as traps for photoexcited electrons, thereby inhibiting catalysis (Muhich et al., Increasing the photcatalytic acitivity of anatase TiO.sub.2 through B, C, and N doping Journal of Physcial Chemistry C, vol. 118, pp. 27415-27427, 2014). The approach taken here for creating microstructural defects in the titanium oxide band structure was to introduce dopant atoms of different valence states or radii into the titanium oxide in order to disrupt reduction reaction rates and thereby reduce the active metal corrosion rate in associated galvanic couples.
[0041] Pure titanium was selected because, as a valve metal, it formed a very stable oxide that was well characterized and the titanium alloy, Ti 6Al -4V, has numerous aircraft applications. The oxide that forms on pure titanium is thermodynamically stable up to a range of +1.6-+1.4 V.sub.SHE (+1.36 -+1.16 V.sub.SCE) for pH 10-13 and, thus, for the alkaline conditions expected to obtain when acting as the noble material in a galvanic couple, the electrochemical properties of the oxide dominate its cathodic behavior. A schematic illustration of the electrochemical system is shown in
[0042] Computer simulations of oxygen reduction reactions on various transition metal oxides (Man et al., Universality in oxygen evolution electrocatalysis on oxide surfaces ChemCatChem, vol. 3, pp. 1159-1165, 2011) suggested that cobalt, tin, and chromium would be useful elements to consider as alloying elements in titanium. The electrochemical properties of the oxides of the various alloys were investigated using potentiodynamic polarization, rotating-disk-electrode (RDE) cyclic voltammetry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), Mott-Schottky (MS) tests, and intensity modulated photocurrent spectroscopy (IMPS) experiments.
[0043] Computational chemistry was used to obtain guiding design principles. Computational catalysis studies often report calculable thermodynamic descriptors and Sabatier volcano curves to identify optimal catalysts near the top of the activity volcano (see e.g., Norskov et al., J. Phys. Chem. B 2004, 108, 17886-17892; Fabbri et al., J. Catal. Sci. Tech. 2014, 4, 3800-3821; Greeley et al., Energy Environ. Sci. 2012, 5, 9246-9256; Morales-Guio et al., Chem. Soc. Rev. 2014, 43, 6555-6569.). While this level of modeling works well in predicting dopants that maximize the catalytic activity of a material, it remains an open question if these in silico models are also robust for predicting dopants that minimize catalytic activity, i.e. dopants that lie near the bottom of the Sabatier volcano plots. This work confirms that computational catalysis modeling is also robust in this regime. Disclosed is an integrated computational and experimental study that demonstrates that simple Sabatier volcano descriptors can be used to identify metal dopants that decrease oxygen reduction currents by as much as 77% when impregnated in amorphous TiO.sub.2 at doping concentrations of 1%.
[0044] Calculating reaction overpotentials with the computational hydrogen electrode model (Norskov et al., J. Phys. Chem. B 2004, 108, 17886-17892) is routinely the first step toward understanding electrocatalytic activity. Although this model is not normally used for calculating reaction barrier heights and rate constants, it can yield robust insight into trends in electrocatalytic reaction rates. This methodology was used to calculate reaction overpotentials for the dissociative ORR mechanism shown. (The symbol * denotes an empty surface site on the material.) Because the hydrogen evolution reaction (H.sub.2H.sup.++e.sup.) is in equilibrium at 0 V vs. the standard hydrogen electrode (VSHE), the energies of protons and electrons in electrochemical reduction steps were modeled as half the energy of an H.sub.2 molecule plus a linear energy correction to account for an applied potential. Using these energy corrections, the theoretical reaction overpotential was calculated by finding the applied potential at which all four reaction steps are downhill in energy. Mathematically, this was determined by the most uphill reaction step at the equilibrium potential for the ORR (1.23 VSHE). For example, sites 1-4 in
*+O.sub.2+H.sup.++e.sup.*OOH(1)
*OOH+H.sup.++e.sup.*O+H.sub.2O(2)
*O+H.sup.++e.sup.*OH(3)
*OH+H.sup.++e.sup.*+H.sub.2O(4)
[0045] Calculated energies from Kohn-Sham density functional theory (DFT) were obtained using the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP) (Kresse et al., J. Phys. Rev. B 1996, 54, 11169-11186; Kresse et al., J. Comput. Mater. Sci. 1996, 6, 15-50; Kresse et al., J. Phys. Rev. B 1994, 49, 14251-14269; Kresse et al., J. Phys. Rev. B 1993, 47, 558-561) utilizing the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) (Perdew et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1996, 77, 3865-3868; Perdew et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 1997, 78, 1396-1396) GGA exchange correlation functional and the projector augmented wave (PAW) method (Blochl, Phys. Rev. B 1994, 50, 17953-17979; Kresse et al., Phys. Rev. B 1999, 59, 1758-1775) with spin polarization. Planewave energy cutoffs of 450 eV and a 221 k-point grid gave well-converged intermediate energies. The zero point energy, entropic, and solvation free energy contributions were approximated by using the values predicted by Valdes et al., J. Phys. Chem. C 2008, 112, 9872-9879 for the ORR intermediates adsorbed to TiO.sub.2.
[0046] An atomistic reactive forcefield (ReaxFF) (Kim et al., Langmuir 2013, 29, 7838-7846; van Duin et al., J. Phys. Chem. A 2001, 105, 9396-9409) was used to create an amorphous oxide surface model as had been done by others (Ewing et al., Langmuir 2014, 30, 5133-5141). Crystalline TiO.sub.2 surfaces were annealed using ReaxFF (Aktulga et al., Parallel Comput. 2012, 38, 245-259) as implemented in LAMMPS, (Plimpton, Comput. Phys. 1995, 117, 1-19) and the resulting annealed structure was then geometrically relaxed using Kohn-Sham density functional theory (DFT) calculations as described below. Unit cells of these systems containing about 160 atoms were found to reasonably match experimental x-ray diffraction patterns for TiO.sub.2 nanoparticles showing this to be a reasonable model for an amorphous TiO.sub.2 surface (Petkov et al., Non-Cryst. Solids 1998, 231, 17-30). On this surface, four possible sites were found accessible for ORR catalysis (
[0047] Different metal dopants were considered that could be introduced into the oxide to increase ORR overpotentials. Each dopant atom was embedded into the surface at its preferred oxidation state given by experimental Pourbaix diagrams (Takeno, Geological survey of Japan open file report 2005, 419, 1-102) at the corrosion experiment operating conditions, 0.8 V vs the saturated calomel electrode (VSCE) at pH 12. The stability of each dopant was compared at all four different active sites shown in
[0048] The predicted overpotential for each metal dopant is displayed in a Sabatier volcano diagram (
[0049] The alloys include titanium and a dopant metal that may be any of cobalt, tin, chromium, aluminum, manganese, vanadium, silver, any other metal disclosed herein, any other metal that reduces galvanic corrosion when used as described herein, or any combination of these metals. The alloy may be free of any other metals, or it may contain a trace amount of contaminating metals. The contaminants may be present in an amount less than the total molar amount of the dopant, less than 1 mol %, or less than 0.1 mol %. The alloy has the formula Ti.sub.1-xM.sub.x, where M is the dopant or dopants and x is from 0.001 to 0.02, or from 0.005 to 0.015. The alloy may have the formula Ti.sub.99M.sub.1. The alloy may be included in a composition that is at least 90 or 99 wt % of the alloy. The alloys may be made by the methods disclosed herein or by any other method for producing alloys.
[0050] As titanium tends to oxidize on exposure to air, an article made from the alloy or a composition containing the alloy will have an oxide on its surface. The oxide includes atoms of both titanium and the dopant. Such an article may be a fastener such as a bolt or a screw.
[0051] When the fastener is used for fastening metal components, it will typically be positioned in electrical contact with one of the metal components. Electrolytes, such as aqueous electrolytes, may come in electrical contact with both the fastener and the metal component. For example, rainwater or condensation may collect to form a droplet electrical connecting the metal component and the fastener. When the metal component has a lower electrode potential in the electrolyte than titanium, galvanic corrosion may occur in the metal. However, the amount of corrosion is reduced due to the presence of the dopant.
[0052] An advantage of this process is that the titanium oxide spontaneously forms on contact with air because of the high reactivity of pure titanium and the oxide is very tough so that it is resistant to damage and can re-form on its own. In addition, by bulk alloying the desired dopant atoms, the dopant atoms are incorporated into the oxide when it forms, rather than needing to be reapplied from the outside.
[0053] The following examples are given to illustrate specific applications. These specific examples are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure in this application. Titanium (99.995% purity) and Ti-based minor solute alloy ingots were produced at solute concentration of 1 at % using the arc-melting technique using high purity metals (Co 99.995%, Sn 99.999%, Cr 99.996%). Ingots were subsequently suction cast into a custom copper mold consisting of two cylindrical regions of 1 cm and 0.6 cm diameter the latter for RDE test specimens, which were then machined and ground to 4 mm discs of 5.05 mm diameter. After casting and machining, for Ti, Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1, and Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1, a four hour solution anneal at 827 C., within the single phase HCP region, was performed followed by a water quench. In the case of Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1, a four hour solution anneal at 685 C. was used due to the shift in the HCP single phase field to a lower temperature and lower solubility (Murray, The CoTi(Cobalt-Titanium) system Bulletin of Alloy Phase Diagrams, vol. 3, pp. 74-85, 1982). Similar alloys of Ag, Al, Mn, and V were also made by the same or similar methods. X-ray diffraction, Cu k-alpha, was used to verify single phase structure and determine the lattice coefficients using whole pattern fits. Prior to electrochemical testing, samples were polished in successively finer grits to 1200 grit using SiC paper. For baseline electrochemical testing, samples were mounted in insulating epoxy.
[0054] Potentiodynamic polarization characterization of the various titanium alloys was performed in 0.6 M NaCl+0.01M KOH (pH 12) electrolyte with a platinum wire counter electrode and a saturated calomel reference cell. The titanium alloy oxides were equilibrated at room temperature and ambient aeration for 1 hour. After an 18-hour open circuit (OC) hold, the potentiodynamic polarizations were performed over a range of potentials starting from +0.02 V above the equilibrium potential to 1.5 V.sub.SCE or 2.0 V.sub.SCE using a graphite counter electrode. The potentials were stepped at a rate of 0.167 mV/sec.
[0055] Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) characterization of the various titanium alloys was performed in 0.1 M KOH (pH 13) with a platinum wire counter electrode and a silver-oxide pseudo-reference cell (Austin et al., Review of fundamental investigations of silver oxide electrodes United States Army Materiel Commande, Washington, D.C., 1965). The titanium alloy oxides were equilibrated at room temperature and ambient aeration for 1 hour. The EIS scans were performed at the oxides' equilibrium potentials with a 5 mV.sub.RMS perturbation at frequencies from 100 kHz to 0.1 Hz.
[0056] Mott-Schottky analysis tests of the various oxides were performed in 0.1 M KOH (pH 13) with a platinum wire counter electrode and a silver-oxide pseudo-reference cell. The titanium alloy oxides were equilibrated at room temperature and ambient aeration for 1 hour. The applied DC potentials were stepped in 100 mV increments from +0.5 V.sub.SCE to 1.5 V.sub.SCE. The oscillating potential was applied at 100 Hz at 5 mV.sub.RMS.
[0057] Intensity modulated photocurrent spectroscopy (IMPS) characterization (Peter, Dynamic aspectgs of semiconductor photoelectrochemistry Chemical Reviews, vol. 90, pp. 753-769, 1990) of the various oxides was also performed in 0.1 M KOH (pH 13) with a platinum wire counter electrode and a silver-oxide pseudo-reference cell. The titanium alloy oxides were equilibrated at room temperature and ambient aeration for 1 hour. Two potentiostats were used for these characterizations. The primary potentiostat applied the baseline DC current and AC modulation to the LED while the secondary potentiostat received the clock signal from the primary and measured the response of the sample. The AC current supplied to the LED varied in frequency from 5000 Hz to 0.1 Hz while the magnitude of the oscillation was varied to account for the maximum current permitted through the LED. A dozen LEDs, identified by the emitted wavelength with the highest intensity, were used that spanned the spectrum from infrared to ultraviolet light: 1450 nm, 1200 nm, 850 nm, 660 nm, 617 nm, 590 nm, 530 nm, 505 nm, 470 nm, 420 nm, 405 nm, and 310 nm.
[0058] Lastly, cyclic voltammetry (CV), using rotating disc electrode (RDE) measurements, of the catalytic activity of the various oxides were performed in 0.6 M NaCl+0.01 M KOH (pH 12) under conditions in which the electrolyte was aerated with pressurized air and de-oxygenated with nitrogen. The discs were rotated at 100, 400, 900, 1600, and 2500 rpm. The potential was scanned at a rate of 5 mV/sec from +0.25 V.sub.SCE to 1.75 V.sub.SCE.
[0059] Alloy characterizationDiffraction indicated that annealing Ti, Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1, Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1, and Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 produced a single HCP phase. Unit cell determinations based on the diffraction results is shown in
[0060] Potentiodynamic polarization scansExamples of the results from the cathodic polarizations for each of the oxides are shown in
[0061] EIS and Mott-Schottky scansA modified Bode plot of the oxide responses to the EIS scans for pure titanium and the alloys are shown in
[0062] Examples of the results from the Mott-Schottky tests for each of the oxides are shown in
[0063] IMPS ScansThe photoelectrochemical response, as a Bode plot representation, of the titanium oxide to a range of photon energies and light modulation frequencies is shown in
[0064] The photoelectrochemical response, using a Nyquist plot representation, of the oxides of pure Ti, Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1, Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1, and Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 to 310 nm wavelength UV light with modulation frequencies from 5000 Hz to 0.1 Hz is shown in
[0065] CV measurementsIn deoxygenated and aerated environments, portions of the CV scans on pure titanium, Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1, Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1, and Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 are shown in
[0066] Because only single time constants are present in the EIS responses in
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Values determined from a CPE equivalent circuit model fit to EIS data obtained from pure titanium oxide and oxides of titanium alloys along with the calculated oxide film capacitance Calculated Fit Parameter Capacitance Metal Oxide Y.sub.0 (S*s.sup.) R.sub.P (k) (F) Pure Ti 0.931 22.21 10.sup.6 85.4 8.4 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 0.890 12.61 10.sup.6 267.5 2.7 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 0.909 7.59 10.sup.6 1110 2.4 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 0.909 12.97 10.sup.6 1035 4.2
[0067] In order to address how the electronic structure of the oxide affects reduction reaction kinetics, the Mott-Schottky relationship (Mantia et al., A critical assessment of the Mott-Schottky analysis for the characterization of passive film-electrolyte junctions Russian Journal of Electrochemistry, vol. 11, pp. 1306-1322, 2010; Azumi et al., Mott-Schottky plot of the passive film formed on iron in neutral borate and phosphate solution Journal of the Electrochemical Society, vol. 134, pp. 1352-1357, 1987), Eq. (6), was employed to determine the flatband potential of the oxides of the pure titanium and binary alloy oxides.
where E.sub.FB is the flatband potential, C is the interfacial capacitance, e is the charge on the electron, A is the interfacial contact area, is the dielectric constant of the oxide, .sub.0 is vacuum permittivity, and V.sub.app is the externally applied potential. The Mott-Schottky equation proposes an inverse relationship between capacitance and applied potential with the slope related to the donor concentration, N.sub.D. An example of the analysis for Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 is presented in
[0068] The dielectric constants, , for the oxides can be obtained from Eq. (7).
where C is the capacitance, is the dielectric constant of the oxide, .sub.0 is vacuum permittivity, and A
[0069] is the exposed area, and D is the oxide thickness. The exposed areas were roughly 0.20 cm.sup.2 and the oxide thickness was estimated to be 2 nm. From the equivalent CPE circuit fits in
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Calculated dielectric constants for the metal oxides. Metal Oxide Capacitance (F) Dielectric Constant Pure Ti 8.4 97 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 2.7 31 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 2.4 28 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 4.2 48
[0070] The donor concentration can be obtained from the following equation:
where the slope is from the linear best-fit line to the 1/C.sup.2 vs. potential plot for each oxide from the Mott-Schottky measurements, as shown in
[0071] The donor concentration values suggest the oxidation states shown in Table 4 for the oxide components. The oxidation states imply that the three alloying elements to the bulk Ti: Co, Sn, and Cr, are all p-type dopants in the oxides.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Estimated oxidation states for the elements comprising the various oxides. Element Oxidation State O 2 Ti +4 Co +3 Sn +2 Cr +3
[0072] The flatband potentials (Table 5) fix the lower bound of the conduction band in the oxides but the band gaps are also needed to determine the top edge of the valence bands. The response of the oxide films to the IMPS experiments, as shown in
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Values for E.sub.FB, the flatband potential, and the dopant concentration, N.sub.D, determined from the analysis of the Mott-Schottky tests performed on the pure titanium oxide and oxides of titanium alloys. Metal Oxide E.sub.FB (V.sub.SCE) N.sub.D (cm.sup.3) Pure Ti 0.31 7.0 10.sup.21 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 0.19 5.6 10.sup.21 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 0.18 13 10.sup.21 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 0.24 6.3 10.sup.21
[0073] The plot in
[0074] The top of the valence band energies can then be obtained by subtracting the band gap energy from the bottom of the conduction band energies, with the results shown in Table 6.
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 Values for the band gap energies and valence band energies for titanium oxide and the oxides of the titanium alloys. Metal Oxide E.sub.g (eV) E.sub.VB (V.sub.SHE) Pure Ti 2.90 2.59 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 2.82 2.63 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 2.88 2.70 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 2.78 2.54
[0075] The above analysis can be summarized in the chart shown in
[0076] The chart in
[0077] Measurements of the oxygen reduction reaction kinetics on each of the oxide surfaces, as shown in
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 Reduction currents measured during RDE experiments on each oxide at 0.9 V.sub.SCE, at 1600 rpm rotation speed in 0.6M NaCl + 0.01M KOH and compared to the baseline of the pure TiO.sub.2. Potential Reduction current Oxide (V.sub.SCE) (A/cm.sup.2) % change Pure Ti 0.9 414 0 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 0.9 173 58 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 0.9 14 97 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 0.9 6 99
[0078] These data suggest that the presence of these alloying elements in the oxide disrupt its catalytic capability. A similar trend is seen in the Nyquist plot of the IMPS results in
[0079] Computational modeling predicted that Mn and Al would bring the highest ORR overpotentials of the cases considered and thus would be the best dopants for suppressing ORR activity and corrosion. Co, Sn, and Cr in turn should be moderate inhibitors, and Nb and Ag should increase ORR activity relative to pure amorphous TiO.sub.2. This is consistent with previous work by Arashi and coworkers that showed Nb doped amorphous TiO.sub.2 has a slightly lower overpotential than the undoped material (Arashi et al., Catal. Today 2014, 233, 181-186). Vanadium is a more challenging dopant to characterize because it has two stable oxidations states V.sup.3+ and V.sup.5+ that lie near the experimental conditions. Thus, V dopants are likely present as a mixture of V.sup.3+ and V.sup.5+. At more negative applied potentials, the ratio of V.sup.3+/V.sup.5+ should increase to favor V.sup.3+ and the ORR activity of the oxide should decrease. This suggests that different dopants could have different capacities to suppress corrosion at different applied potentials in the experiments. The Pourbaix diagrams for all other considered dopants have only one stable oxidation state near the experimental conditions. Trends for seven dopants were experimentally verified, but Ga, Zn, and Si were also computationally predicted to destabilize ORR intermediates on the surface and potentially result in even better ORR inhibition than Al and Mn.
[0080]
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 8 Percent change in current at 0.8 VSCE of alloy samples versus the undoped Ti Current density Alloy (A/cm.sup.2) % change Ti 8.8 Ti.sub.99V.sub.1 2.0 77 3 Ti.sub.99Mn.sub.1 3.1 65 4 Ti.sub.99Al.sub.1 3.4 61 11 Ti.sub.99Co.sub.1 4.7 47 5 Ti.sub.99Cr.sub.1 6.2 30 8 Ti.sub.99Sn.sub.1 6.9 21 11 Ti.sub.99Ag.sub.1 17.3 +95 13
[0081] The quantum chemistry predictions almost exactly mirror the experimental results. The trend in dopant performance predicted by computational modeling was:
Ag>undoped>Sn>Co>Cr>Al>Mn>V
while experimental linear sweep voltammetry measurements found almost exactly the same ranking:
Ag>undoped>Sn>Cr>Co>Al>Mn>V
[0082] The model appears to overestimate the effect of Cr relative to Co, but these fall quite close on the volcano plot within 0.2 eV. This signifies that not only are Sabatier analyses useful for discerning materials with high catalytic activity (as is done for fuel cell catalysis), but such modeling is also robust enough to identify dopants for materials having low catalytic activities.
[0083] The ability of the dopant atoms to bind the ORR intermediates was hypothesized to correlate with the total charge of each intermediate after it is bound to the surface. Bader charge analysis shows that *OOH bound to Al.sup.3+, Ag.sup.+, Mn.sup.2+, or V.sup.3+has a charge of 0.70, 0.86, 1.02, or 1.05, respectively. Note that dopants with larger degrees of charge transfer would bind the intermediates more tightly, and thus more effectively poison the surface for chemical reactions. Dopants falling on the left side of the activity volcano and their overpotentials are due to the energy required to remove *OH from the surface (Eq. (4)). This is similar to the findings of Markovic et al. (Nat. Chem. 2009, 1, 466-472) who showed that electrolyte ions can (de)stabilize *OH on the surface and alter ORR rates by an order of magnitude. On the other hand, dopants that transfer too little charge will form weaker bonds that are not strong enough to form reaction intermediates. The overpotential of these dopants is determined by the energy required to form *OOH (Eq. (1)), and they are located on the right side of the activity volcano.
[0084] For dopants with intermediate oxidation states (i.e. V.sup.3+, Mn.sup.2+, Cr.sup.3+, Co.sup.2+, and AG.sup.+), the ability to donate electron density appears to correlate with their approximate redox potentials from Pourbaix diagrams in the literature (V.sub.2O.sub.3V.sub.3O.sub.5 at E.sup.0=0.5 VSHE, Mn.sup.3+
Mn.sub.2O.sub.3 at E.sup.0=0.3 VSHE, Cr.sub.2O.sub.3
CrO.sub.4.sup.2 at E.sup.0=0.2 VSHE, CoO
Co.sub.3O.sub.4 at E.sup.0=1.0 VSHE, and Ag.sup.+
Ag.sub.2O.sub.3 at E.sup.0=1.2 VSHE (Takeno, Geological survey of Japan open file report 2005, 419, 1-102)). For dopants at their highest oxidation state, (i.e. Nb.sup.5+, Ti.sup.4+, Sn.sup.4+, and Al.sup.3+) the ability to bind to ORR intermediates correlates surprisingly well with the calculated atomic radii of the dopants (Nb=1.98 , Ti=1.76 , Sn=1.45 , and Al=1.18 ). Bonding orbitals in smaller dopants (such as Sn and Al) have less orbital overlap which makes it more difficult to transfer electron density to the adsorbed intermediates than larger dopants (such as Nb). This results in weaker bonds and higher overpotentials. Although this trend might be coincidental, Ge, Zn, Ga, and Si all have atomic radii similar to Al (Ge=1.25 , Zn =1.42 , Ga=1.36 , and Si=1.11 ) which is consistent with the predictions that these dopants may indeed suppress ORR activity more than Al and Mn.
[0085] Obviously, many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that the claimed subject matter may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described. Any reference to claim elements in the singular, e.g., using the articles a, an, the, or said is not construed as limiting the element to the singular.