Hot electron-driven electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction on metal–semiconductor nanodiode electrodes

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Abstract

Hot electrons generated on metal catalysts influence atomic and molecular processes, leading to hot electron-driven catalytic reactions. Here, we show the acceleration of electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution caused by internal injection of hot electrons on Pt/Si metal–semiconductor electrodes. When a forward bias voltage is applied to the Pt/Si contact, hot electrons are injected. The excess energy of these electrons allows them to reach the Pt/electrolyte interface and reduce the adsorbed hydrogen ions to form H 2 (2H + + 2e − →H 2 ). We show that the onset potential of the hydrogen evolution reaction shifts positively by 160 mV while the cathodic current exhibits an 8-fold increase in the presence of hot electrons. The effect disappears when the thickness of the Pt film exceeds the mean free path of the hot electrons. The concept of a hot electron-driven reaction can lead to the development of a novel mechanism for controlling reactivity at liquid–solid interfaces.

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Nedrygailov, I. I., Moon, S. Y., & Park, J. Y. (2019). Hot electron-driven electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction on metal–semiconductor nanodiode electrodes. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-42566-3

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