How hydrogen treatment makes MoS2 more reliable for various applications


Nov 01, 2023

(Nanowerk News) Molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) is a highly versatile material that can function, for example, as a gas sensor or as a photocatalyst in green hydrogen production. Although the understanding of a material usually starts from investigating its bulk crystalline form, for MoS2 much more studies have been devoted to mono and few layer nanosheets. The few studies conducted thus far show diverse and irreproducible results for the electronic properties of cleaved bulk MoS2 surfaces, highlighting the need for a more systematic study.

Key Takeaways

  • Researchers used advanced techniques to study the inconsistencies in the electronic properties of cleaved bulk MoS2, a versatile material used in applications like sensors and green hydrogen production.
  • They found that the surface of freshly cleaved MoS2 has significant electronic variations, making results hard to replicate.
  • Treating the surface with atomic hydrogen at room temperature can effectively stabilize the material’s electronic properties, paving the way for more reliable applications.
  • The illustration shows the MoS2 lattice structure (green: Mo, yellow: S) The illustration shows the MoS2 lattice structure (green: Mo, yellow: S). The material after cleaving is shown in the forefront, the surface is jagged, and the measured surface electronic structure is inhomogeneous (coloured map). In the back is the cleaved material after exposure to atomic hydrogen (represented by the white balls). The measured surface electronic structure, shown in the map, is more homogenous. (Image: Martin Künsting, HZB)

    The Research

    Dr. Erika Giangrisostomi and her team at HZB carried such a systematic study at the LowDosePES end-station of the BESSY II light source. They utilised X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy technique to map the core-level electron energies across extensive surface areas of MoS2 samples. Using this method, they were able to monitor the changes in the surface electronic properties after in situ ultra-high-vacuum cleaving, annealing and exposure to atomic and molecular hydrogen. The findings have been published in Advanced Materials Interfaces (“Inhomogeneity of Cleaved Bulk MoS2 and Compensation of Its Charge Imbalances by Room-Temperature Hydrogen Treatment”). The results from this study point to two main findings. Firstly, the study unambiguously reveals sizeable variations and instabilities in electron energies for the freshly cleaved surfaces, demonstrating how easy it is to come to diverse and irreproducible outcomes. Secondly, the study shows that room temperature atomic hydrogen treatment is remarkably effective in neutralising the surface electronic inhomogeneity and instability. This is rationalised by the ability of hydrogen atoms to either accept or give away an electron, and calls for further characterisations of the functional properties of the hydrogenated material. “We hypothesise that atomic hydrogen helps rearranging sulphur vacancies and excess of sulphur atoms yielding a more ordered structure”. Erika Giangrisostomi says. This study marks a fundamental step in the investigation of MoS2. Due to the extensive use of MoS2 in all kinds of applications, the findings of this research have the potential to reach a wide audience in the fields of electronics, photonics, sensors and catalysis.

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