Highly active hydrogen evolution facilitated by topological surface states on a Pd/SnTe metal/topological crystalline insulator heterostructure
Qing Qu, Bin Liu, Wing Sum Lau, Ding Pan, Iam Keong Sou

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that a Pd/SnTe heterostructure with topological surface states significantly enhances hydrogen evolution reaction activity, surpassing commercial platinum, due to electron transfer mechanisms involving topological states.
Contribution
It reveals that topological surface states in a Pd/SnTe heterostructure boost HER activity, providing a new approach to designing high-performance electrocatalysts.
Findings
Heterostructure exhibits higher HER activity than pure Pd and Pt.
Topological surface states facilitate electron transfer, weakening Pd-H bonds.
Enhanced intrinsic activity per Pd site at lower overpotentials.
Abstract
Recently, topological quantum materials have emerged as a promising electrocatalyst for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, most of their performance largely lags behind noble metals such as benchmark platinum (Pt). In this work, a Pd(20nm)/SnTe(70nm) heterostructure, fabricated by molecular beam epitaxy and electron beam evaporation, is found to display much higher electrocatalytic activity than that of a pure Pd(20nm) thin film and even higher than that of a commercial Pt foil. This heterostructure adopts an extracted turnover frequency value more than two times higher than that of the Pd(20nm) thin film at a potential of 0.2 V, indicating a much higher intrinsic activity per Pd site. Density functional theory calculations show that the conventional d-band theory, which works well for many transition metal heterostructures, cannot explain the enhancement of electrocatalytic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion · Hydrogen Storage and Materials · Catalytic Processes in Materials Science
