Abstract
The hydrogen due to its high mass energy density is a new renewable, economically viable and clean resource. The most eco-friendly and economical approaches for the generation of hydrogen through hydrogen evolution is electrochemical water splitting. The two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials have been recently found as potential candidates as non-noble metal catalyst for hydrogen evolution. In this work, we have systematically studied the structural and electronic properties of the newly predicted hexagonal-aluminium carbide monolayer (h-AlC ML) under the framework of dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The calculated electronic total density of states (TDOS) of h-AlC ML predict its metallic nature in contrast to other polar honeycomb 2D materials which are either semiconducting or semimetallic. The metallic behavior of h-AlC monolayer which motivates us to investigate its HER activity results due to the presence of delocalized charge density near Fermi level. Thus, we have investigated the HER activity of h-AlC ML by calculating hydrogen (H) adsorption energy (ΔEH) and Gibbs free energy (ΔGH) at three different sites of the 3 × 3 and 4 × 4 supercells of h-AlC ML; top of carbon atom (EH-C), top of aluminium atom (EH-Al) and hollow site (EH-Hollow). Our results show that the hollow site is most catalytically active site in both supercells of h-AlC ML. We believe that our results will inspire experimentalists to fabricate this new 2D material for achieving the desired range of HER activity.
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