| Literature DB >> 26517577 |
Francesco Carraro1, Laura Calvillo1, Mattia Cattelan1, Marco Favaro1,2, Marcello Righetto1, Silvia Nappini3, Igor Píš3,4, Verónica Celorrio5, David J Fermín5, Alessandro Martucci6, Stefano Agnoli1, Gaetano Granozzi1.
Abstract
Aerosol processing enables the preparation of hierarchical graphene nanocomposites with special crumpled morphology in high yield and in a short time. Using modular insertion of suitable precursors in the starting solution, it is possible to synthesize different types of graphene-based materials ranging from heteroatom-doped graphene nanoballs to hierarchical nanohybrids made up by nitrogen-doped crumpled graphene nanosacks that wrap finely dispersed MoS2 nanoparticles. These materials are carefully investigated by microscopic (SEM, standard and HR TEM), diffraction (grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD)) and spectroscopic (high resolution photoemission, Raman and UV-visible spectroscopy) techniques, evidencing that nitrogen dopants provide anchoring sites for MoS2 nanoparticles, whereas crumpling of graphene sheets drastically limits aggregation. The activity of these materials is tested toward the photoelectrochemical production of hydrogen, obtaining that N-doped graphene/MoS2 nanohybrids are seven times more efficient with respect to single MoS2 because of the formation of local p-n MoS2/N-doped graphene nanojunctions, which allow an efficient charge carrier separation.Entities:
Keywords: graphene oxide; hydrogen evolution reaction; nanohybrids; photocatalysis; transition metal dichalcogenides
Year: 2015 PMID: 26517577 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b06668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229