Applied Catalysis B-environmental | 2021

Exposing highly active (100) facet on a SnS2/SnO2 electrocatalyst to boost efficient hydrogen evolution

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Tin disulfide (SnS2), one transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) is a cost-effective and promising electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution reactions (HER) in the alkaline electrolytes. Its electrocatalytic HER performance is unfortunately limited, originating from its un-conspicuous inherent catalytic activities and non-favorable adsorption sites for hydrogen. Herein, a tin disulfide/stannic oxide (SnS2/SnO2) heterostructure is designed and grown on the nickel foam (denoted as SnS2/SnO2-NF). The SnS2/SnO2 heterostructure introduces more active (100) facets or a high density of active sites, accelerates the diffusion kinetic of electrons and ions, lowers the water dissociation energies, and optimizes adsorption energies of hydrogen atoms. On this catalyst, superior HER performance is realized in an alkaline medium. An overpotential of 108\u2009mV at a current density of −10\u2009mA\u2009cm–2 with a Tafel slope of 50.1\u2009mV dec–1 and long-term durability are achieved for HER in 1\u2009M KOH. This work paves a new way to design high-performance HER electrocatalyst through facet engineering of the designed heterostructures.

Volume None
Pages 120200
DOI 10.1016/J.APCATB.2021.120200
Language English
Journal Applied Catalysis B-environmental

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