Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution

Switching to clean, renewable energy is essential to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate global warming. Unfortunately, renewable energy is intermittent, and strategies to store renewable energy are needed before renewable energy can meet humanity’s energy needs. Hydrogen is a clean fuel with high...

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Main Author: Tan, Zheng Hao
Other Authors: Han Sen Soo
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156334
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1563342023-02-28T23:17:51Z Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution Tan, Zheng Hao Han Sen Soo School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences hansen@ntu.edu.sg Science::Chemistry Engineering::Materials::Energy materials Switching to clean, renewable energy is essential to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate global warming. Unfortunately, renewable energy is intermittent, and strategies to store renewable energy are needed before renewable energy can meet humanity’s energy needs. Hydrogen is a clean fuel with high energy density and produces only harmless water when oxidized for energy. Green hydrogen can be produced from water electrolysis using renewable electricity, but production is currently not economically competitive as current water electrolyzers require expensive platinum-group metal catalysts. The catalytic activity of the edge sites of molybdenum disulfide is almost as high as platinum, and it is non-toxic, cheap, and earth-abundant. This makes molybdenum disulfide a promising replacement for platinum in water electrolyzers. Bulk molybdenum disulfide has low overall catalytic activity because only the edge sites are catalytically active whereas as the basal planes are inert. In this project, we adopt an inverse opal structure to preferentially expose more edge sites in molybdenum disulfide and introduce sulfur vacancies to activate the basal plane for catalytic water splitting. Bachelor of Science in Chemistry and Biological Chemistry 2022-04-14T11:44:57Z 2022-04-14T11:44:57Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Tan, Z. H. (2022). Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156334 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156334 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Chemistry
Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
spellingShingle Science::Chemistry
Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
Tan, Zheng Hao
Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
description Switching to clean, renewable energy is essential to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate global warming. Unfortunately, renewable energy is intermittent, and strategies to store renewable energy are needed before renewable energy can meet humanity’s energy needs. Hydrogen is a clean fuel with high energy density and produces only harmless water when oxidized for energy. Green hydrogen can be produced from water electrolysis using renewable electricity, but production is currently not economically competitive as current water electrolyzers require expensive platinum-group metal catalysts. The catalytic activity of the edge sites of molybdenum disulfide is almost as high as platinum, and it is non-toxic, cheap, and earth-abundant. This makes molybdenum disulfide a promising replacement for platinum in water electrolyzers. Bulk molybdenum disulfide has low overall catalytic activity because only the edge sites are catalytically active whereas as the basal planes are inert. In this project, we adopt an inverse opal structure to preferentially expose more edge sites in molybdenum disulfide and introduce sulfur vacancies to activate the basal plane for catalytic water splitting.
author2 Han Sen Soo
author_facet Han Sen Soo
Tan, Zheng Hao
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Zheng Hao
author_sort Tan, Zheng Hao
title Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
title_short Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
title_full Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
title_fullStr Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
title_full_unstemmed Development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
title_sort development of porous electrodes for electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156334
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