Role of Functionalized Graphene Quantum Dots in Hydrogen Evolution Reaction: A Density Functional Theory Study
Vaishali Sharma, Basant Roondhe, Sumit Saxena, and Alok Shukla

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to analyze how functionalizing graphene quantum dots with oxygen and boron groups affects their catalytic efficiency for hydrogen evolution, suggesting potential for low-cost hydrogen production.
Contribution
It provides a systematic DFT analysis of functionalized GQDs, revealing their promising catalytic properties for HER and guiding experimental catalyst development.
Findings
GQDs functionalized with oxygen and boron groups show near-ideal Gibbs free energy for hydrogen adsorption.
Functionalization significantly alters electronic properties of GQDs, enhancing catalytic potential.
The study proposes pathways for experimental realization of GQD-based HER catalysts.
Abstract
Density functional theory (DFT) can be quite advantageous in advancing the field of catalysis because of the microscopic insights it provides, and thus can guide experimental searches of novel catalysts. Several recent works have demonstrated that low-dimensional materials can be very efficient catalysts. Graphene quantum dots (GQDs) have gained much attention in past years due to their unique properties like low toxicity, chemical inertness, biocompatibility, crystallinity, etc. These properties of GQDs which are due to quantum confinement and edge effects facilitate their applications in various fields like sensing, photoelectronics, catalysis, and many more. Furthermore, the properties of GQDs can be enhanced by doping and functionalization. In order to understand the effects of functionalization by oxygen and boron based groups on the catalytic properties relevant to the…
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