Surfactant-exfoliated 2D molybdenum disulphide (2D-MoS2): the role of surfactant upon the hydrogen evolution reaction†
Abstract
Surfactant (sodium cholate, SC) mediated liquid (aqueous) phase exfoliation is a common approach to fabricate 2D molybdenum disulphide (2D-MoS2–SC) nanosheets since it is a facile methodology producing defect free flakes with nanometer lateral sizes. The electrocatalytic behaviour of 2D-MoS2–SC towards the Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER) is benchmarked within acidic media and found to exhibit inferior HER activity to an equivalent mass of pristine 2D-MoS2 (2D-MoS2 produced without a surfactant), with HER onset potentials, current densities and Tafel values of −0.61 V (vs. SCE), −2.19 mA cm−2, 141 mV dec−1 and −0.42 V (vs. SCE), −4.96 mA cm−2, 94 mV dec−1 respectively. This work demonstrates that sodium cholate has a detrimental effect upon the HER activity of 2D-MoS2. Future studies that utilise 2D materials, fabricated via liquid surfactant exfoliation, should consider the role of the surfactant in the observed electrochemical responses and perform the necessary control experiments.
- This article is part of the themed collections: SBQ-RSC: Celebrating UK-Brazil collaborations and 2D Materials: Explorations Beyond Graphene