Welcome to Journal of Synthetic Crystals! Today is Aug. 20, 2025 Share:

Journal of Synthetic Crystals ›› 2025, Vol. 54 ›› Issue (6): 1034-1041.DOI: 10.16553/j.cnki.issn1000-985x.2025.0020

• Research Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Controlling Hydrogen Evolution Reaction of Janus MoSSe by Defect and Strain Engineering

LIU Jingsong1(), SHEN Lu2(), REN Longjun2, HUANG Xizhong3   

  1. 1.Department of Automotive & Construction,Xiamen Information School,Xiameng 361009,China
    2.School of Civil Engineering,Wanjiang University of Technology,Ma’anshan 243031,China
    3.Technology Center,Jida United Precision Machinery (Xiamen) Co.,Ltd.,Xiamen 361009,China
  • Received:2025-01-25 Online:2025-06-20 Published:2025-06-23

Abstract: Janus transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) exhibit exceptional electronic, optical, and catalytic properties due to their unique asymmetric structure, showing broad application prospects in fields such as nanocatalysis and thermoelectrics. This study employs first-principles calculations to systematically investigate the stability and hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) performance of monolayer Janus MoSSe with typical vacancy defects. The results demonstrate that the Gibbs free energy of monolayer Janus MoSSe during the HER process is significantly reduced to approximately 0.5 eV, markedly lower than that of pristine MoSSe and conventional MoS2 monolayers. Further research reveals that the introduction of external strain can effectively modulate the HER performance of defective Janus MoSSe. The performance enhancement is primarily attributed to the adaptive release of concentrated strain by dangling bonds in the defect regions, resulting in a notable tunable mode. This study elucidates the underlying mechanism of strain engineering in improving the HER performance of MoSSe, providing a theoretical foundation for the optimized design of efficient HER catalysts based on defective Janus TMDs.

Key words: transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD); first-principle; hydrogen evolution reaction (HER); Gibbs free energy; strain engineering; defective structure

CLC Number: