TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanostructured, alkaline titanate‐converted, and heat‐treated Ti6Al4V microspheres via wet‐chemical alkaline modification and their ORR electrocatalytic response
AU - Wadge, Matthew D.
AU - Bird, Matthew A.
AU - Sankowski, Andrzej
AU - Constantin, Hannah
AU - Fay, Michael W.
AU - Cooper, Timothy P.
AU - O'Shea, James N.
AU - Khlobystov, Andrei N.
AU - Walsh, Darren A.
AU - Johnson, Lee R.
AU - Felfel, Reda M.
AU - Ahmed, Ifty
AU - Grant, David M.
PY - 2022/12/2
Y1 - 2022/12/2
N2 - This study describes the chemical conversion and heat treatment of Ti6Al4V microspheres (Ti6_MS), and the resulting effects on their electrocatalytic properties. The wet‐chemical conversion (5.0 m NaOH, 60 °C, 24 h; Sample label: Ti6_TC) converts the top surface of the Ti6_MS powder into an ≈820 nm thick sodium titanate surface. Heat‐treatment (Ti6_TC_HT) at 450 °C increases the stability of the surface, through partial titanate crystallization, while mitigating excess rutile formation. All samples are analyzed chemically (XPS, EDX, Raman, EELS), structurally (XRD and TEM), and morphologically (SEM, TEM), demonstrating the characteristic formation of sodium titanate dendritic structures, with minimal chemical, structural, and morphological differences due to the 450 °C heat‐treatment. The effect of the preparation methodology on oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) electrocatalytic performance is also tested. The introduction of the sodium titanate layer changes the mechanism of the ORR, from a mixed 4 electron/2 electron pathway to a predominantly 2‐electron pathway. By maintaining the microspherical nature of the material while also tuning the surface of the material toward different reaction mechanisms, a design strategy for new electrocatalyst materials is explored.
AB - This study describes the chemical conversion and heat treatment of Ti6Al4V microspheres (Ti6_MS), and the resulting effects on their electrocatalytic properties. The wet‐chemical conversion (5.0 m NaOH, 60 °C, 24 h; Sample label: Ti6_TC) converts the top surface of the Ti6_MS powder into an ≈820 nm thick sodium titanate surface. Heat‐treatment (Ti6_TC_HT) at 450 °C increases the stability of the surface, through partial titanate crystallization, while mitigating excess rutile formation. All samples are analyzed chemically (XPS, EDX, Raman, EELS), structurally (XRD and TEM), and morphologically (SEM, TEM), demonstrating the characteristic formation of sodium titanate dendritic structures, with minimal chemical, structural, and morphological differences due to the 450 °C heat‐treatment. The effect of the preparation methodology on oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) electrocatalytic performance is also tested. The introduction of the sodium titanate layer changes the mechanism of the ORR, from a mixed 4 electron/2 electron pathway to a predominantly 2‐electron pathway. By maintaining the microspherical nature of the material while also tuning the surface of the material toward different reaction mechanisms, a design strategy for new electrocatalyst materials is explored.
KW - wet‐chemical conversion
KW - Ti6Al4V microspheres
KW - alkaline ORR
KW - alkaline titanate
KW - nanoporous surfaces
U2 - 10.1002/admi.202201523
DO - 10.1002/admi.202201523
M3 - Article
SN - 2196-7350
VL - 10
JO - Advanced Materials Interfaces
JF - Advanced Materials Interfaces
IS - 5
M1 - 2201523
ER -