Abstract

AbstractAnodically electrodeposited amorphous molybdenum sulfide (AE‐MoSx) has attracted significant attention as a non‐noble metal electrocatalyst for its high activity toward the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). The [Mo3S13]2− polymer‐based structure confers a high density of exposed sulfur moieties, widely regarded as the HER active sites. However, their intrinsic complexity conceals full understanding of their exact role in HER catalysis, hampering their full potential for water splitting applications. In this report, a unifying approach is adopted accounting for modifications in the inherent electrochemistry (EC), HER mechanism, and surface species to maximize the AE‐MoSx electroactivity over a broad pH region (0–10). Dramatic enhancements in HER performance by selective electrochemical cycling within reductive (overpotential shift, ηHER ≈ −350 mV) and electro‐oxidative windows (ηHER ≈ −290 mV) are accompanied by highly stable performance in mildly acidic electrolytes. Joint analysis of X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman, and EC experiments corroborate the key role of bridging and terminal S ligands as active site generators at low pH, and reveal molybdenum oxysulfides (Mo5+OxSy) to be the most active HER moiety in AE‐MoSx in mildly acidic‐to‐neutral environments. These findings will be extremely beneficial for future tailoring of MoSx materials and their implementation in commercial electrolyzer technologies.

Highlights

  • Can be efficiently produced on demand and Anodically electrodeposited amorphous molybdenum sulfide (AE-MoSx) has attracted significant attention as a non-noble metal electrocatalyst for its high activity toward the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER)

  • Joint analysis of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman, and EC experiments corroborate the key role of bridging and terminal S ligands as active site generators at low pH, and reveal molybdenum oxysulfides (Mo5+OxSy) to be the troadsorption properties of TMDs[12,13] have prompted the fabrication of amorphous molybdenum sulfide materials (MoSx) to minimize exposure of the electrocatalytically inert MoS2 basal planes[14] for multiple applications.[15,16,17,18,19]

  • Preliminary electrochemical deposition studies were performed on Si/Ti/Au electrodes to evaluate the influence of experimental conditions on the growth of amorphous molybdenum sulfide (MoSx) thin films

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Summary

Electrochemical Growth of Amorphous Molybdenum Sulfide

Preliminary electrochemical deposition studies were performed on Si/Ti/Au electrodes to evaluate the influence of experimental conditions (electrochemical setup, deposition parameters) on the growth of amorphous molybdenum sulfide (MoSx) thin films. AE-MoSx has been utilized for the remainder of this report

AE-MoSx Inherent Electrochemical Activity
AE-MoSx Activity After Electrochemical Conditioning
AE-MoSx Long-Term HER Performance
Conclusion
Experimental Section
Conflict of Interest
Full Text
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