Ordered clustering of single atomic Te vacancies in atomically thin PtTe₂ promotes hydrogen evolution catalysis

Exposing and stabilizing undercoordinated platinum (Pt) sites and therefore optimizing their adsorption to reactive intermediates offers a desirable strategy to develop highly efficient Pt-based electrocatalysts. However, preparation of atomically controllable Pt-based model catalysts to understand...

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Main Authors: Li, Xinzhe, Fang, Yiyun, Wang, Jun, Fang, Hanyan, Xi, Shibo, Zhao, Xiaoxu, Xu, Danyun, Xu, Haomin, Yu, Wei, Hai, Xiao, Chen, Cheng, Yao, Chuanhao, Tao, Hua Bing, Howe, Alexander G. R., Pennycook, Stephen J., Liu, Bin, Lu, Jiong, Su, Chenliang
Other Authors: School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/172410
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Exposing and stabilizing undercoordinated platinum (Pt) sites and therefore optimizing their adsorption to reactive intermediates offers a desirable strategy to develop highly efficient Pt-based electrocatalysts. However, preparation of atomically controllable Pt-based model catalysts to understand the correlation between electronic structure, adsorption energy, and catalytic properties of atomic Pt sites is still challenging. Herein we report the atomically thin two-dimensional PtTe2 nanosheets with well-dispersed single atomic Te vacancies (Te-SAVs) and atomically well-defined undercoordinated Pt sites as a model electrocatalyst. A controlled thermal treatment drives the migration of the Te-SAVs to form thermodynamically stabilized, ordered Te-SAV clusters, which decreases both the density of states of undercoordinated Pt sites around the Fermi level and the interacting orbital volume of Pt sites. As a result, the binding strength of atomically defined Pt active sites to H intermediates is effectively reduced, which renders PtTe2 nanosheets highly active and stable in hydrogen evolution reaction.