The direct methal fuel cell (DMFC) could generate electrical power with high efficiency and low emissions for an automobile power plant. A low-cost, high activity methanol electro-oxidation catalyst would improve DFMC performance and enhance its economic viability. In this project, a combinatorial approach will be employed to discover DMFC catalysts that are better than current materials. The combinatorial approach consists of developing synthetic methods to rapidly prepare 64 miniature electrodes on a 3 inch silicon wafer, followed by parallel, automated evaluation of all samples on the wafer. The system offers at least a 100x increase over current techniques and provides a tool to rationally search for complex catalysts. Phase I demonstrated that DMFC electrocatalysts prepared in this manner behaved similarly to those prepared by traditional methods, and that the combinatorial methods provide a far superior and more efficient means of searching for new materials. In Phase II, a fully automated DMFC anode deposition and testing system will be constructed. Up to 25,000 new ternary and quaternary catalysts will be evaluated, and carbon monoxide poisoning studies will be performed. The best catalysts will be further evaluated in an actual DMFC environment.
Commercial Applications and Other Benefits as described by the awardee: Anode materials discovered in this project could provide the breakthroughs that enable highly efficient, environmentally benign fuel cells to replace lower efficiency and higher polluting energy sources. Applications include power sources for the transportation sector, commercial power plants, military applications, space exploration, cell phones and portable computers.