Journal ArticleOpen Access
Chemically activating MoS2 via spontaneous atomic palladium interfacial doping towards efficient hydrogen evolution
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Science and Technology of China, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Southeast University, ...
Published InNature Communications
Year2018
Citations631
Abstract
Abstract Lacking strategies to simultaneously address the intrinsic activity, site density, electrical transport, and stability problems of chalcogels is restricting their application in catalytic hydrogen production. Herein, we resolve these challenges concurrently through chemically activating the molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) surface basal plane by doping with a low content of atomic palladium using a spontaneous interfacial redox technique. Palladium substitution occurs at the molybdenum site, simultaneously introducing sulfur vacancy and converting the 2H into the stabilized 1T structure. Theoretical calculations demonstrate the sulfur atoms next to the palladium sites exhibit low hydrogen adsorption energy at –0.02 eV. The final MoS 2 doped with only 1wt% of palladium demonstrates exchange current density of 805 μA cm −2 and 78 mV…
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Fields & Keywords
Physical SciencesEnergyRenewable Energy, Sustainability and the EnvironmentElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionAdvanced Photocatalysis Techniques2D Materials and ApplicationsChemical physicsNanotechnologyChemical engineeringInorganic chemistryPhysical chemistryComputational chemistryCrystallographyOptoelectronicsOrganic chemistryMetallurgy