Adaptive Catalytic Nanointerfaces for Controlled Hydrogen Evolution: an in Situ Electrochemical Approach
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Wiley
Abstract
Precious metal nanoparticles in electrocatalytic applications tend to be single-use, becoming unusable afterward. Here, this is demonstrated that the electrocatalytic response of these nanoparticles, when confined at the step-edges of corrugated carbon nanofibers interiors, can be switched on again at will by simply introducing sulfur as an inorganic mediator. To achieve this, an electrochemical methodology is developed that triggers the rapid surface reconfiguration of confined, deactivated nanoparticles (PdSx) involving the release of sulfur to yield highly active crystalline Pd(0) nanoparticles, confined polysulfides, and sulfur-terminated carbon step-edges. More importantly, the electrochemical performance can be systematically switched from a highly active mode, in which polysulfides enhance the hydrogen adsorption on palladium, to a much less active mode, called the resting mode, in which sulfur (formed by the oxidation of polysulfides) passivates the active Pd(0) nanoparticle surface. This discovery introduces a new protocol to control nanoparticle performance for catalytic reactions, and more crucially, to extend their lifespan.
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C. Herreros-Lucas, M. Guillén-Soler, L. Vizcaíno-Anaya, G. Murray, M. Aygün, J. M. Vila-Fungueiriño, M. del Carmen Giménez-López, Adaptive Catalytic Nanointerfaces for Controlled Hydrogen Evolution: an in Situ Electrochemical Approach. Adv. Sci. 2025, e05104. https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202505104
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https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202505104Sponsors
This work has received financial support from the Ministry of Science of Spain (Projects No. PID2021-127341OB-I00 and TED2021-131451B-C21 for M.G.-L.), the European Research Council (ERC) (Starting Investigator Grant (NANOCOMP-679124) and Proof of Concept (ZABCAT-966743) for M.G.-L.), the Xunta de Galicia (Centro Singular de Investigación de Galicia accreditation 2023–2027, ED431G 2023/03; ED431C 2024/05, the Oportunius Research Professor Program (Gain)), the European Union (European Regional Development Fund – ERDF). G.M. acknowledges The University of Nottingham for his Predoctoral Fellowship. C.H.-L., M.G.-S., and M.A. were supported by the project ERC-StG-679124. L.V.-A. Acknowledges Ministry of Universities of Spain for her Predoctoral Fellowship FPU2020. J.M.V.-F. Acknowledges Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation for his postdoctoral grant (IJC2020-044369-I).
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© 2025 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Attribution 4.0 International
Attribution 4.0 International








