Colloidal phase control of Ni–P nanocrystals reveals a P-site hydrogen evolution reaction mechanism distinct from Ni-rich analogues
- Authors
- Lee, Yeongbin; Choi, Seyoung; Jang, Seohyeon; Cho, Byeong-Gwan; Jeong, Beomgyun; Kim, Yongsam; Park, Yoonsu; Jeong, Wooseok; Hwang, Yun Jae; Lee, Hyeonseok; An, Boeun; Jeong, Heesoo; Kim, Gyuhyeon; Qi, Dong-Chen; Jang, Jong Hyun; Nam, Inho; Ha, Don-Hyung
- Issue Date
- 2025-11
- Publisher
- Royal Society of Chemistry
- Citation
- Journal of Materials Chemistry A
- Abstract
- Nickel phosphides have emerged as promising earth-abundant catalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), yet most studies have focused on Ni-rich phases (e.g., Ni2P, Ni5P4), where catalytic activity is commonly attributed to metallic Ni surface sites. In contrast, the catalytic potential of phosphorus-rich phases has remained largely unexplored due to synthetic challenges that have hindered access to phase-pure compositions. Here, we report the colloidal synthesis of phase-controlled Ni–P nanocrystals, granting access to four distinct phases (Ni12P5, Ni2P, Ni5P4, NiP2) and overcoming long-standing barriers such as phosphorus volatility and biphasic formation. This synthetic platform enables a direct and systematic comparison across the compositional gradient and reveals a fundamentally distinct HER mechanism at the P-rich end: hydrogen adsorption and evolution proceed preferentially on surface phosphorus atoms, rather than on Ni hollow or bridge sites as in conventional Ni-rich phosphides. Electrochemical analysis and density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that NiP2 exhibits superior HER performance compared to its Ni-rich analogues, despite having a lower electrochemically active surface area. This P-site-driven reactivity uncovers a previously unrecognized catalytic regime and challenges the prevailing Ni-centric model in transition metal phosphide catalysis. Our findings demonstrate that tuning the stoichiometry toward phosphorus-rich compositions not only alters the surface electronic structure but also redefines the identity of the active site. This work positions NiP2 as a prototype for anion-driven HER catalysis and introduces a new conceptual framework for designing non-precious electrocatalysts that exploit metalloid-active centers.
- Keywords
- TOTAL-ENERGY CALCULATIONS; MOLYBDENUM PHOSPHIDE; HIGH-PERFORMANCE; ELECTROCATALYST; NANOPARTICLES; PHOTOELECTRON; SPECTROSCOPY; NANOSTRUCTURED NICKEL PHOSPHIDE; PHOSPHORUS; ABSORPTION
- ISSN
- 2050-7488
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/153833
- DOI
- 10.1039/d5ta06219e
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2025
- Export
- RIS (EndNote)
- XLS (Excel)
- XML
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.