Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting

Density functional theory is utilized to articulate a particular generic deconstruction of the electrode/electro-catalyst assembly for the cathode process during water splitting. A computational model was designed to determine how alloying elements control the fraction of H2 released during zirconiu...

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Main Authors: Mikaela Lindgren, Itai Panas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Beilstein-Institut 2014-02-01
Series:Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
Subjects:
DFT
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.5.21
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spelling doaj-f71a6b170a634679a6562d6c67c632d82020-11-25T01:49:08ZengBeilstein-InstitutBeilstein Journal of Nanotechnology2190-42862014-02-015119520110.3762/bjnano.5.212190-4286-5-21Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splittingMikaela Lindgren0Itai Panas1Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, S-412 96 Gothenburg, SwedenDepartment of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, S-412 96 Gothenburg, SwedenDensity functional theory is utilized to articulate a particular generic deconstruction of the electrode/electro-catalyst assembly for the cathode process during water splitting. A computational model was designed to determine how alloying elements control the fraction of H2 released during zirconium oxidation by water relative to the amount of hydrogen picked up by the corroding alloy. This model is utilized to determine the efficiencies of transition metals decorated with hydroxide interfaces in facilitating the electro-catalytic hydrogen evolution reaction. A computational strategy is developed to select an electro-catalyst for hydrogen evolution (HE), where the choice of a transition metal catalyst is guided by the confining environment. The latter may be recast into a nominal pressure experienced by the evolving H2 molecule. We arrived at a novel perspective on the uniqueness of oxide supported atomic Pt as a HE catalyst under ambient conditions.https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.5.21confinementcorrosionDFTelectro-catalysishydrogen evolution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikaela Lindgren
Itai Panas
spellingShingle Mikaela Lindgren
Itai Panas
Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
confinement
corrosion
DFT
electro-catalysis
hydrogen evolution
author_facet Mikaela Lindgren
Itai Panas
author_sort Mikaela Lindgren
title Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
title_short Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
title_full Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
title_fullStr Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
title_full_unstemmed Confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
title_sort confinement dependence of electro-catalysts for hydrogen evolution from water splitting
publisher Beilstein-Institut
series Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
issn 2190-4286
publishDate 2014-02-01
description Density functional theory is utilized to articulate a particular generic deconstruction of the electrode/electro-catalyst assembly for the cathode process during water splitting. A computational model was designed to determine how alloying elements control the fraction of H2 released during zirconium oxidation by water relative to the amount of hydrogen picked up by the corroding alloy. This model is utilized to determine the efficiencies of transition metals decorated with hydroxide interfaces in facilitating the electro-catalytic hydrogen evolution reaction. A computational strategy is developed to select an electro-catalyst for hydrogen evolution (HE), where the choice of a transition metal catalyst is guided by the confining environment. The latter may be recast into a nominal pressure experienced by the evolving H2 molecule. We arrived at a novel perspective on the uniqueness of oxide supported atomic Pt as a HE catalyst under ambient conditions.
topic confinement
corrosion
DFT
electro-catalysis
hydrogen evolution
url https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.5.21
work_keys_str_mv AT mikaelalindgren confinementdependenceofelectrocatalystsforhydrogenevolutionfromwatersplitting
AT itaipanas confinementdependenceofelectrocatalystsforhydrogenevolutionfromwatersplitting
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