Engineering Vacancies at the 2D Nanocrystals for Robust Bifunctional Electrocatalysts
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Abstract
Hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) through water decomposition are feasible methods to produce green and clean energy. Herein, we report a facile two-step strategy for the preparation of non-noble metal defect-rich nanosheets by an electrochemical process at room temperature. First-principle calculations are used to study the bifunctional catalytic reaction mechanism of defect engineering in transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs); from the first-principle calculations, we predicted that the rich S vacancies on the nanosheet promoted electron transfer and reduced the energy barrier of electrocatalysis. As a substantiation, we conducted HER/OER electrochemical characterizations and found that the defect-rich atomic-thick tantalum sulfide is a kind of dual-function electrocatalyst with enhanced comprehensive properties of Tafel slope (39 mV/dec for HER, 38 mV/dec for OER) and low overpotential (0.099 V for HER, 0.153 V for OER) in acidic and alkaline environments, respectively. Likewise, the defect-rich catalysts exhibit high stability in acidic and alkaline solutions, which have potential applications as electrocatalysts for the large-scale production of hydrogen and oxygen.
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