This study systematically investigates a synergistic catalyst–ionomer design strategy integrating catalyst architecture, support chemistry, and ionomer structure to enable proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) performance relevant to heavy-duty applications. A non-commercial PtCo alloy catalyst supported on nitrogen-doped mesoporous carbon (PtCo/MFCS) enhances intrinsic oxygen reduction reaction activity via alloying while promoting ionomer dispersion, proton accessibility, and favorable interfacial interactions through surface nitrogen functionalities. In parallel, a short-side-chain perfluorosulfonic acid (SSC PFSA) ionomer (Aquivion® D79) is introduced to improve proton conductivity and water retention under low-humidity conditions. In a systematic MEA campaign, PtCo/MFCS delivers over 16 × higher mass activity at 0.9 V (537 vs 32 mA mg Pt −1 ) than a commercial Pt/Vulcan catalyst, despite 43% lower Pt loading, supported by higher electrochemically active surface area and improved dispersion. Beyond kinetic gains, the mesoporous nitrogen-doped support enhances mid-to-high current density performance by facilitating oxygen transport and water management. Replacing Nafion® with Aquivion® D79 further sustains performance under partial humidification down to 33% RH, demonstrating that SSC ionomer benefits emerge only when coupled with appropriate support porosity and chemistry. Overall, the results reveal strong catalyst–support–ionomer synergy, enabling robust, balance-of-plant-friendly PEMFC operation and offering a credible pathway toward U.S. Department of Energytargets for heavy-duty fuel cell. • PtCo/N-doped carbon shows >16 × higher mass activity than commercial Pt/Vulcan. • Mesoporous N-doped support enhances ECSA, Pt utilization, and oxygen transport. • PtCo catalyst outperforms Pt/Vulcan at 2 bar(abs), revealing pressure dependence. • Short-side-chain PFSA ionomer improves PEMFC performance at low humidity (33–50% RH). • EIS confirms reduced ohmic and charge-transfer resistances versus baseline MEA.
Massaro et al. (Sun,) studied this question.