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A highly efficient atomically thin curved PdIr bimetallene electrocatalyst

  • Fan Lv
  • , Bolong Huang
  • , Jianrui Feng
  • , Weiyu Zhang
  • , Kai Wang
  • , Na Li
  • , Jinhui Zhou
  • , Peng Zhou
  • , Wenxiu Yang
  • , Yaping Du
  • , Dong Su
  • , Shaojun Guo*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Peking University
  • Hong Kong Polytechnic University
  • Frontier Institute of Science and Technology
  • Brookhaven National Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The multi-metallene with an ultrahigh surface area has great potential in precise tuning of surface heterogeneous d-electronic correlation by surface strain effect for the distinctive surface electronic structure, which is a brand new class of promising 2D electrocatalyst for sustainable energy device application. However, achieving such an atomically thin multi-metallene still presents a great challenge. Herein, we present a new synthetic method for an atomic-level palladium-iridium (PdIr) bimetallene with an average thickness of only ∼1.0 nm for achieving superior catalysis in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and the formic acid oxidation reaction (FAOR). The curved PdIr bimetallene presents a top-ranked high electrochemical active area of 127.5 ± 10.8 m2 gPd+Ir-1 in the reported noble alloy materials, and exhibits a very low overpotential, ultrahigh activity and improved stability for HER and FAOR. DFT calculation reveals that the PdIr bimetallene herein has a unique lattice tangential strain, which can induce surface distortion while concurrently creating a variety of concave-convex featured micro-active regions formed by variously coordinated Pd sites agglomeration. Such a strong strain effect correlates the abnormal on-site active 4d10-t2g-orbital Coulomb correlation potential and directly elevates orbital-electronegativity exposure within these active regions, resulting in a preeminent barrier-free energetic path for significant enhancement of FAOR and HER catalytic performance.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbernwab019
JournalNational Science Review
Volume8
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • PdIr alloy
  • atomically thin
  • electrocatalyst
  • metallene
  • strain

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