Abstract
The
production of hydrogen through water splitting using earth-abundant metal
catalysts is a promising pathway for converting solar energy into chemical
fuels. However, existing approaches for fine stoichiometric control, structural
and catalytic modification of materials by appropriate choice of earth abundant
elements are either limited or challenging. Here we explore the tuning of redox
active immobilized molecular metal-chalcoxide electrocatalysts by controlling
the chalcogen or metal stoichiometry and explore critical aspects of the
hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) shows that
stoichiometric and structural control leads to the evolution of hydrogen at low
overpotential with no catalyst degradation over 1000 cycles. Density functional
calculations reveal the effect of the electronic and structural features and
confer plausibility to the existence of a unimolecular mechanism in the HER
process based on the tested hypotheses. We anticipate these findings to be a
starting point for further exploration of molecular catalytic systems
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information-NCOMMS-author version
Description
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