3 research outputs found
Multiscale Confinement Engineering for Boosting Overall Water Splitting by One-Step Stringing of a Single Atom and a Janus Nanoparticle within a Carbon Nanotube
Enzyme-mimicking
confined catalysis has attracted great interest
in heterogeneous catalytic systems that can regulate the geometric
or electronic structure of the active site and improve its performance.
Herein, a liquid-assisted chemical vapor deposition (LCVD) strategy
is proposed to simultaneously confine the single-atom Ru sites onto
sidewalls and Janus Ni/NiO nanoparticles (NPs) at the apical nanocavities
to thoroughly energize the N-doped carbon nanotube arrays (denoted
as Ni/NiO@Ru-NC). The bifunctional Ni/NiO@Ru-NC electrocatalyst exhibits
overpotentials of 88 and 261 mV for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER)
and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at 100 mA cm–2 in alkaline solution, respectively, all ranking the top tier among
the carbon-supported metal-based electrocatalysts. Moreover, once
integrated into an anion-exchange membrane water electrolysis (AEMWE)
system, Ni/NiO@Ru-NC can act as an efficient and robust bifunctional
electrocatalyst to operate stably for 50 h under 500 mA cm–2. Theoretical calculations and experimental exploration demonstrate
that the confinement of Ru single atoms and Janus Ni/NiO NPs can regulate
the electron distribution with strong orbital couplings to activate
the NC nanotube from sidewall to top, thus boosting overall water
splitting
Multiscale Confinement Engineering for Boosting Overall Water Splitting by One-Step Stringing of a Single Atom and a Janus Nanoparticle within a Carbon Nanotube
Enzyme-mimicking
confined catalysis has attracted great interest
in heterogeneous catalytic systems that can regulate the geometric
or electronic structure of the active site and improve its performance.
Herein, a liquid-assisted chemical vapor deposition (LCVD) strategy
is proposed to simultaneously confine the single-atom Ru sites onto
sidewalls and Janus Ni/NiO nanoparticles (NPs) at the apical nanocavities
to thoroughly energize the N-doped carbon nanotube arrays (denoted
as Ni/NiO@Ru-NC). The bifunctional Ni/NiO@Ru-NC electrocatalyst exhibits
overpotentials of 88 and 261 mV for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER)
and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at 100 mA cm–2 in alkaline solution, respectively, all ranking the top tier among
the carbon-supported metal-based electrocatalysts. Moreover, once
integrated into an anion-exchange membrane water electrolysis (AEMWE)
system, Ni/NiO@Ru-NC can act as an efficient and robust bifunctional
electrocatalyst to operate stably for 50 h under 500 mA cm–2. Theoretical calculations and experimental exploration demonstrate
that the confinement of Ru single atoms and Janus Ni/NiO NPs can regulate
the electron distribution with strong orbital couplings to activate
the NC nanotube from sidewall to top, thus boosting overall water
splitting
Au-Seeded CsPbI<sub>3</sub> Nanowire Optoelectronics via Exothermic Nucleation
Converting vapor precursors to solid nanostructures via
a liquid
noble-metal seed is a common vapor deposition principle. However,
such a noble-metal-seeded process is excluded from the crystalline
halide perovskite synthesis, mainly hindered by the growth mechanism
shortness. Herein, powered by a spontaneous exothermic nucleation
process (ΔH 3 nanowires (NWs) growth is realized based on a vapor–liquid–solid
(VLS) growth mode. It is energetically favored that the Au seeds are
reacted with a Pb vapor precursor to form molten Au–Pb droplets
at temperatures down to 212 °C, further triggering the low-temperature
VLS growth of CsPbI3 NWs. More importantly, this Au-seeded
process reduces in-bandgap trap states and consequently avoids Shockley–Read–Hall
recombination, contributing to outstanding photodetector performances.
Our work extends the powerful Au-seeded VLS growth mode to the emerging
halide perovskites, which will facilitate their nanostructures with
tailored material properties
