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Autobifunctional Mechanism of Jagged Pt Nanowires for Hydrogen Evolution Kinetics via End-to-End Simulation

  • Geun Ho Gu
  • , Juhyung Lim
  • , Chengzhang Wan
  • , Tao Cheng
  • , Heting Pu
  • , Sungwon Kim
  • , Juhwan Noh
  • , Changhyeok Choi
  • , Juhwan Kim
  • , William A. Goddard
  • , Xiangfeng Duan
  • , Yousung Jung
  • Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
  • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Soochow University
  • California Institute of Technology

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

The extraordinary mass activity of jagged Pt nanowires can substantially improve the economics of the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, it is a great challenge to fully unveil the HER kinetics driven by the jagged Pt nanowires with their multiscale morphology. Herein we present an end-to-end framework that combines experiment, machine learning, and multiscale advances of the past decade to elucidate the HER kinetics catalyzed by jagged Pt nanowires under alkaline conditions. The bifunctional catalysis conventionally refers to the synergistic increase in activity by the combination of two different catalysts. We report that monometals, such as jagged Pt nanowires, can exhibit bifunctional characteristics owing to its complex surface morphology, where one site prefers electrochemical proton adsorption and another is responsible for activation, resulting in a 4-fold increase in the activity. We find that the conventional design guideline that the sites with a 0 eV Gibbs free energy of adsorption are optimal for HER does not hold under alkaline conditions, and rather, an energy between -0.2 and 0.0 eV is shown to be optimal. At the reaction temperatures, the high activity arises from low-coordination-number (≤7) Pt atoms exposed by the jagged surface. Our current demonstration raises an emerging prospect to understand highly complex kinetic phenomena on the nanoscale in full by implementing end-to-end multiscale strategies.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)5355-5363
Nombre de pages9
journalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume143
Numéro de publication14
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 14 avr. 2021
Modification externeOui

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