Direct electrochemical identification of rare microscopic catalytic active sites.
Cameron L BentleyLachlan F GaudinMinkyung KangPublished in: Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) (2023)
Local voltammetric analysis with a scanning electrochemical droplet cell technique, in combination with a new data processing protocol (termed data binning and trinisation), is used to directly identify previously unseen regions of elevated electrocatalytic activity on the basal plane (BP) of molybdenum disulfide (2H-MoS 2 ). This includes BP-like structures with hydrogen evolution reaction activities approaching that of the edge plane and rare nanoscale electrocatalytic "hot-spots" present at an areal density of approximately 0.2-1 μm -2 . Understanding the nature of (sub)microscopic catalytic active sites, such as those identified herein, is crucial to guide the rational design of next-generation earth-abundant materials for renewable fuels production.
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