Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

Cohesive energy discrepancy drives the fabrication of multimetallic atomically dispersed materials for hydrogen evolution reaction

  • Xinyi Yang,
  • Wanqing Song,
  • Kang Liao,
  • Xiaoyang Wang,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Jinfeng Zhang,
  • Haozhi Wang,
  • Yanan Chen,
  • Ning Yan,
  • Xiaopeng Han,
  • Jia Ding,
  • Wenbin Hu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52520-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Atomically dispersed single atom (SA) and atomic cluster (AC) metallic materials attract tremendous attentions in various fields. Expanding monometallic SA and AC to multimetallic SA/AC composites opens vast scientific and technological potentials yet exponentially increasing the synthesis difficulty. Here, we present a general energy-selective-clustering methodology to build the largest reported library of carbon supported bi-/multi-metallic SA/AC materials. The discrepancy in cohesive energy results into selective metal clustering thereby driving the symbiosis of multimetallic SA or/and AC. The library includes 23 bimetallic SA/AC composites, and expanded compositional space of 17 trimetallic, quinary-metallic, septenary-metallic SA/AC composites. We chose bimetallic M1 SAM2 AC to demonstrate the electrocatalysis utility. Unique decoupled active sites and inter-site synergy lead to 8/47 mV overpotential at 10 mA cm−2 for alkaline/acidic hydrogen evolution and over 1000 h durability in water electrolyzer. Moreover, delicate modulations towards composition and configuration yield high-performance catalysts for multiple electrocatalysis systems. Our work broadens the family of atomically dispersed materials from monometallic to multimetallic and provides a platform to explore the complex composition induced unconventional effects.