TY - JOUR
T1 - Atomic Gap-State Engineering of MoS2 for Alkaline Water and Seawater Splitting
AU - Sun, Tao
AU - Yang, Tong
AU - Zang, Wenjie
AU - Li, Jing
AU - Sheng, Xiaoyu
AU - Liu, Enzhou
AU - Li, Jiali
AU - Hai, Xiao
AU - Lin, Huihui
AU - Chuang, Cheng Hao
AU - Su, Chenliang
AU - Fan, Maohong
AU - Yang, Ming
AU - Lin, Ming
AU - Xi, Shibo
AU - Zou, Ruqiang
AU - Lu, Jiong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/1/11
Y1 - 2025/1/11
N2 - Transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), have emerged as a generation of nonprecious catalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), largely due to their theoretical hydrogen adsorption energy close to that of platinum. However, efforts to activate the basal planes of TMDs have primarily centered around strategies such as introducing numerous atomic vacancies, creating vacancy-heteroatom complexes, or applying significant strain, especially for acidic media. These approaches, while potentially effective, present substantial challenges in practical large-scale deployment. Here, we report a gap-state engineering strategy for the controlled activation of S atom in MoS2 basal planes through metal single-atom doping, effectively tackling both efficiency and stability challenges in alkaline water and seawater splitting. A versatile synthetic methodology allows for the fabrication of a series of single-metal atom-doped MoS2 materials (M1/MoS2), featuring widely tunable densities with each dopant replacing a Mo site. Among these (Mn1, Fe1, Co1, and Ni1), Co1/MoS2 demonstrates outstanding HER performance in both alkaline and seawater alkaline media, with overpotentials at a mere 159 and 164 mV at 100 mA cm-2, and Tafel slopes at 41 and 45 mV dec-1, respectively, which surpasses all reported TMD-based nonprecious materials and benchmark Pt/C catalysts in HER efficiency and stability during seawater splitting, which can be attributed to an optimal gap-state modulation associated with sulfur atoms. Experimental data correlating doping density and dopant identity with HER performance, in conjunction with theoretical calculations, also reveal a descriptor linked to near-Fermi gap state modulation, corroborated by the observed increase in unoccupied S 3p states.
AB - Transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), have emerged as a generation of nonprecious catalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), largely due to their theoretical hydrogen adsorption energy close to that of platinum. However, efforts to activate the basal planes of TMDs have primarily centered around strategies such as introducing numerous atomic vacancies, creating vacancy-heteroatom complexes, or applying significant strain, especially for acidic media. These approaches, while potentially effective, present substantial challenges in practical large-scale deployment. Here, we report a gap-state engineering strategy for the controlled activation of S atom in MoS2 basal planes through metal single-atom doping, effectively tackling both efficiency and stability challenges in alkaline water and seawater splitting. A versatile synthetic methodology allows for the fabrication of a series of single-metal atom-doped MoS2 materials (M1/MoS2), featuring widely tunable densities with each dopant replacing a Mo site. Among these (Mn1, Fe1, Co1, and Ni1), Co1/MoS2 demonstrates outstanding HER performance in both alkaline and seawater alkaline media, with overpotentials at a mere 159 and 164 mV at 100 mA cm-2, and Tafel slopes at 41 and 45 mV dec-1, respectively, which surpasses all reported TMD-based nonprecious materials and benchmark Pt/C catalysts in HER efficiency and stability during seawater splitting, which can be attributed to an optimal gap-state modulation associated with sulfur atoms. Experimental data correlating doping density and dopant identity with HER performance, in conjunction with theoretical calculations, also reveal a descriptor linked to near-Fermi gap state modulation, corroborated by the observed increase in unoccupied S 3p states.
KW - basal planes
KW - gap-state engineering strategies
KW - hydrogen evolution reaction
KW - metal single-atom doping
KW - seawater
KW - transition-metal dichalcogenides
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214671691&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.4c13736
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.4c13736
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 39797811
AN - SCOPUS:85214671691
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 19
SP - 5447
EP - 5459
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 5
ER -