A Hierarchical Polyoxometalate/Pd/Mos2 Hybrid: Developing an Efficient Novel Bifunctional Catalyst for Water Splitting

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Catalytic water splitting is a promising approach to produce clean hydrogen fuel from renewable energy sources. However, developing hybrid heterostructures capable of efficiently breaking down water into its constituent elements, hydrogen, and oxygen, presents a considerable challenge. In this study, a novel hierarchical POM/Pd/MoS2 hybrid heterostructure, composed of sheets of MoS2 modified with Pd nanoparticles and combined with a cobalt-based polyoxometalate (POM), serving as bifunctional catalyst for water splitting is reported. Through a synergistic synthetic approach, MoS2, acting as a reducing agent, triggers the nucleation and growth of Pd nanoparticles, which, in turn, serve as anchoring sites for the polymerization of the cobalt-based POM into fibers. POM/Pd/MoS2 hybrid exhibits an enhanced oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity, comparable to the benchmark catalysts Ir/C and IrO2/C in alkaline media, being its hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity similar to the activated Pd/MoS2 hybrid. The intriguing electrocatalytic capability of the resulting material for producing hydrogen and oxygen through electrochemical means arises from the enhanced charge storage capacity and conductivity of MoS2, the multi-electron transfer facilitated by the POM, and the high electrocatalytic activity of the metals

Description

Bibliographic citation

M. Guillen-Soler, N. V. Vassilyeva, E. P. Quirós-Díez, J. M. Vila-Fungueiriño, A. Forment-Aliaga, M. del C. Gimenez-Lopez, A Hierarchical Polyoxometalate/Pd/Mos2 Hybrid: Developing an Efficient Novel Bifunctional Catalyst for Water Splitting. Adv. Sustainable Syst. 2023, 2300607. https://doi.org/10.1002/adsu.202300607

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

M.G.-S., N.V.V., and E.P.Q.-D. contributed equally to the work. Thiswork has received financial support from the Ministry of Science ofSpain (RYC-2016-20258, PID2021-127341OB-I00, TED2021-131451BC21and PDC2022-133925-I00 for M.d.C.G.-L. and IJC2020-044369-I for J.M.V.-F.), the European Research Council (ERC) [Starting Grant (NANOCOMP-679124) and ZABCAT (966743) for M.d.C.G.-L.], the Generalitat Valenciana(MFA/2022/050 for A.F. and fellowship GRISOLIAP/2019/030 for N.V.),the Xunta de Galicia (Centro singular de investigación de Galicia accredi-tation 2019–2022, ED431G 2019/03 and ED481A-2020/155), and the Eu-ropean Union (European Regional Development Fund─ERDF)

Rights

© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Sustainable Systems published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distributionand reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properlycited
Atribución 4.0 Internacional