Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer

In the world where there is a rising demand for energy and an accelerating climate change crisis, researchers are racing to find viable solutions for generating clean and green energy. In view of this rising trend of using clean and green energy, hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is a energy-generat...

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Main Author: Lim, Carissa Xin Yi
Other Authors: Liu Zheng
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157579
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1575792022-05-21T05:06:30Z Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer Lim, Carissa Xin Yi Liu Zheng School of Materials Science and Engineering Z.Liu@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Materials In the world where there is a rising demand for energy and an accelerating climate change crisis, researchers are racing to find viable solutions for generating clean and green energy. In view of this rising trend of using clean and green energy, hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is a energy-generating solution worth developing as hydrogen is clean, energy-efficient, renewable, and abundant. Single-atom Pt catalyst has great potential for this solution, but is unstable. Monolayer hBN can be utilised as atomic-thin protection layer to increase the stability of single-atom Pt catalyst in HER. However, current methods for deriving large-area, monolayer hBN have poor efficiency with low-yield. This warrants a search for a better method of exfoliating large-area monolayer hBN. PVA-assisted method have been successfully implemented in exfoliating graphene into large-area monolayers in high yield. Hence, this project aims to explore the potential of PVA-assisted methods in exfoliating high-yields of large-area monolayer hBN. The project also hopes to pioneer in such methods, and set standard procedures to act as a guide for future research scientists and students to work on this research area. hBN were exfoliated into layers of various thickness using PVA-assisted methods, and the layers are examined under microscope to find likely large-area monolayer hBN. Various characterisation techniques were employed to verify that the chosen sample was a monolayer hBN. Microscope photos are subsequently analysed using a code, which helps to accelerate the analysis work and thus hasten the research process. The conclusion is PVA-assisted method is indeed much better method than current methods for attaining large-area monolayer hBN, and therefore deserve further exploration and development in future research. Bachelor of Engineering (Materials Engineering) 2022-05-21T05:06:30Z 2022-05-21T05:06:30Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Lim, C. X. Y. (2022). Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157579 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157579 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 Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Lim, Carissa Xin Yi
Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
description In the world where there is a rising demand for energy and an accelerating climate change crisis, researchers are racing to find viable solutions for generating clean and green energy. In view of this rising trend of using clean and green energy, hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is a energy-generating solution worth developing as hydrogen is clean, energy-efficient, renewable, and abundant. Single-atom Pt catalyst has great potential for this solution, but is unstable. Monolayer hBN can be utilised as atomic-thin protection layer to increase the stability of single-atom Pt catalyst in HER. However, current methods for deriving large-area, monolayer hBN have poor efficiency with low-yield. This warrants a search for a better method of exfoliating large-area monolayer hBN. PVA-assisted method have been successfully implemented in exfoliating graphene into large-area monolayers in high yield. Hence, this project aims to explore the potential of PVA-assisted methods in exfoliating high-yields of large-area monolayer hBN. The project also hopes to pioneer in such methods, and set standard procedures to act as a guide for future research scientists and students to work on this research area. hBN were exfoliated into layers of various thickness using PVA-assisted methods, and the layers are examined under microscope to find likely large-area monolayer hBN. Various characterisation techniques were employed to verify that the chosen sample was a monolayer hBN. Microscope photos are subsequently analysed using a code, which helps to accelerate the analysis work and thus hasten the research process. The conclusion is PVA-assisted method is indeed much better method than current methods for attaining large-area monolayer hBN, and therefore deserve further exploration and development in future research.
author2 Liu Zheng
author_facet Liu Zheng
Lim, Carissa Xin Yi
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Carissa Xin Yi
author_sort Lim, Carissa Xin Yi
title Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
title_short Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
title_full Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
title_fullStr Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
title_full_unstemmed Single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
title_sort single atom catalysis with atomic-thin protection layer
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157579
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