Hydrogen storage in pristine and Janus transition-metal dichalcogenide monolayers: electronic origins, coverage effects, and finite-temperature stability
Flavio Bento de Oliveira, Gabriel Elyas Gama Araujo, Andreia Luisa da Rosa

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to analyze hydrogen storage in pristine and Janus transition-metal dichalcogenide monolayers, revealing how electronic structure, phase, and functionalization influence adsorption, stability, and storage potential.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive understanding of hydrogen adsorption mechanisms and stability in TMD monolayers, highlighting design principles for reversible hydrogen storage.
Findings
Hydrogen binds primarily through molecular physisorption across all systems.
Janus functionalization causes side-dependent adsorption energies and distributions.
Ni- and Pd-based Janus TMDs show promising stability and reversible storage capabilities.
Abstract
Here, we present a systematic first-principles study of hydrogen adsorption on pristine and Janus MX2 and MSSe monolayers (M = Ni, Pd, Pt; X = S, Se), combining density-functional theory (DFT) calculations with finite-temperature ab initio molecular dynamics simulations (AIMD). Orbital-resolved electronic-structure analysis reveals that hydrogen binding strength is controlled primarily by the contribution of metal d states near the Fermi level, which increases from Pd and Pt to Ni. Chalcogen substitution from S to Se further modulates adsorption by enhancing surface polarizability. Structure plays a decisive role: metallic 1T phases promote stronger single-molecule adsorption due to enhanced electronic screening, whereas the more open coordination of the 2H phase provides greater configurational freedom at high hydrogen coverage. Janus functionalization introduces chemically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHybrid Renewable Energy Systems · Inorganic Fluorides and Related Compounds · Superconductivity in MgB2 and Alloys
