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. 2017 May;29(19).
doi: 10.1002/adma.201606202. Epub 2017 Mar 15.

Weyl Semimetals as Hydrogen Evolution Catalysts

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Weyl Semimetals as Hydrogen Evolution Catalysts

Catherine R Rajamathi et al. Adv Mater. 2017 May.

Erratum in

  • Weyl Semimetals as Hydrogen Evolution Catalysts.
    Rajamathi CR, Gupta U, Kumar N, Yang H, Sun Y, Süß V, Shekhar C, Schmidt M, Blumtritt H, Werner P, Yan B, Parkin S, Felser C, Rao CNR. Rajamathi CR, et al. Adv Mater. 2021 Nov;33(45):e2103730. doi: 10.1002/adma.202103730. Adv Mater. 2021. PMID: 34751992 No abstract available.

Abstract

The search for highly efficient and low-cost catalysts is one of the main driving forces in catalytic chemistry. Current strategies for the catalyst design focus on increasing the number and activity of local catalytic sites, such as the edge sites of molybdenum disulfides in the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Here, the study proposes and demonstrates a different principle that goes beyond local site optimization by utilizing topological electronic states to spur catalytic activity. For HER, excellent catalysts have been found among the transition-metal monopnictides-NbP, TaP, NbAs, and TaAs-which are recently discovered to be topological Weyl semimetals. Here the study shows that the combination of robust topological surface states and large room temperature carrier mobility, both of which originate from bulk Dirac bands of the Weyl semimetal, is a recipe for high activity HER catalysts. This approach has the potential to go beyond graphene based composite photocatalysts where graphene simply provides a high mobility medium without any active catalytic sites that have been found in these topological materials. Thus, the work provides a guiding principle for the discovery of novel catalysts from the emerging field of topological materials.

Keywords: Weyl semimetals; catalysts; hydrogen evolution reactions; topological materials.

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