Efficient hydrogen evolution reaction due to topological polarization
ORAL
Abstract
One important application of topological materials is toward surface catalysis, particularly hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), which is an iconic procedure in the field of renewable energy. Based on systematic first-principles calculations for A3B (A = Ni, Pd, Pt; B = Si, Ge, Sn), we propose that topological electric polarization characterized by the Zak phase can be crucial to designing efficient catalysts for the HER. For A3B, we, for the first time in semimetals, show that the Zak phase takes a nontrivial value of π in the whole (111) projected Brillouin zone (PBZ), which causes quantized electric polarization charge accumulation at the surface. While the Zak phase covers the whole PBZ, we believe that the impact of topological properties is more significant than well-studied Weyl semimetals.
As a result, depending on the adsorption sites, the hydrogen (H) atom hybridizes with the topological surface states rather than with the bulk states, and the H states are localized in the energy spectrum. The Gibbs free energy difference (ΔG) due to the H adsorption becomes small, which is a highly favorable situation for the HER. Notably, we show that ΔG for Pt3Sn and Pd3Sn are just -0.066 and -0.092 eV, respectively, which are almost half of the value of well-known Pt. Our work proposes new candidates for Zak phase-related topological materials and bridges the connection between topology and surface sciences by showing the impact of topological polarization on HER.
As a result, depending on the adsorption sites, the hydrogen (H) atom hybridizes with the topological surface states rather than with the bulk states, and the H states are localized in the energy spectrum. The Gibbs free energy difference (ΔG) due to the H adsorption becomes small, which is a highly favorable situation for the HER. Notably, we show that ΔG for Pt3Sn and Pd3Sn are just -0.066 and -0.092 eV, respectively, which are almost half of the value of well-known Pt. Our work proposes new candidates for Zak phase-related topological materials and bridges the connection between topology and surface sciences by showing the impact of topological polarization on HER.
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Publication: M.-C. Jiang, G.-Y. Guo, M. Hirayama, T. Yu, T. Nomoto, and R. Arita, arXiv 2207.10337 (Accepted in Physical Review B)
Presenters
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Ming-Chun Jiang
Natl Taiwan Univ, RIKEN CEMS, RIKEN, Center of Emergent Matter Science
Authors
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Ming-Chun Jiang
Natl Taiwan Univ, RIKEN CEMS, RIKEN, Center of Emergent Matter Science
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Guang-Yu Guo
Natl Taiwan Univ
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Motoaki Hirayama
Department of Applied Physics, University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo; RIKEN, University of Tokyo, QPEC, Univ of Tokyo
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Tonghua Yu
Univ of Tokyo
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Takuya Nomoto
Univ of Tokyo, The University of Tokyo, RCAST, Univ of Tokyo, University of Tokyo
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Ryotaro Arita
The University of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS, University of Tokyo, the University of Tokyo