4.8 Article

Electrocatalysis on Edge-Rich Spiral WS2 for Hydrogen Evolution

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 10448-10455

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b04250

Keywords

transition metal dichalcogenide; tungsten disulfide spirals; micro-electrocatalytic cell; conductive AFM; hydrogen evolution reaction

Funding

  1. UGC, Govt. of India [F.2-16/2009 (SA-I)]
  2. CSIR, Govt. of India
  3. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), Department of Science & Technology, Govt. of India [EMR/2017/000484]
  4. Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India
  5. UGC, Government of India
  6. UKIERI
  7. Royal Academy of Engineering (UK)
  8. Newton Bhabha Fund, UK

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Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) exhibit promising catalytic properties for hydrogen generation, and several approaches including defect engineering have been shown to increase the active catalytic sites. Despite preliminary understandings in defect engineering, insights on the role of various types of defects in TMDs for hydrogen evolution catalysis are limited. Screw dislocation-driven (SDD) growth is a line defect and yields fascinating spiral and pyramidal morphologies for TMDs with a large number of edge sites, resulting in very interesting electronic and catalytic properties. The role of dislocation lines and edge sites of these spiral structures on their hydrogen evolution catalytic properties is unexplored. Here we show that the large number of active edge sites connected together by dislocation lines in the vertical direction for a spiral WS2 domain results in exceptional catalytic properties toward hydrogen evolution reaction. A micro-electrochemical cell fabricated by photo- and electron beam-lithography processes is used to study the electrocatalytic activity of a single spiral WS2 domain, controllably grown by chemical vapor deposition. Conductive atomic force microscopy studies show improved vertical conduction for the spiral domain, which is compared with monolayer and mechanically exfoliated thick WS2 flakes. The obtained results are interesting and shed light on the role of SDD line defects, which contribute to large number of edge sites without compromising the vertical electrical conduction, on the electrocatalytic properties of TMDs for hydrogen evolution.

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