skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Search for: All records

Creators/Authors contains: "Liyanage, Wipula"

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  2. Identifying new catalyst composition for carbon dioxide electroreduction to high-value products has been the center of attraction over the last several years. In this article, nickel selenide (NiSe 2 ) has been identified as a high-efficiency electrocatalyst for CO 2 electroreduction at neutral pH. Interestingly, NiSe 2 shows high selectivity towards specific reduction products, forming carbon-rich C2 products like ethanol and acetic acid exclusively at lower applied potential with 98.45% faradaic efficiency, while C1 products formic acid and carbon monoxide formed preferentially at higher applied potential. More importantly, the C2 products such as acetic acid and ethanol are obtained at very low applied potential, which further corroborates the novelty of this catalyst in CO 2 utilization with minimal energy expense. The NiSe 2 catalyst surface has been studied through density functional theory calculations which show that the adsorption energy of the CO intermediate on the NiSe 2 surface is optimal for extensive reduction through formation of C–C bonds but not strong enough for surface passivation, thus leading to high selectivity for C2 products. Such high efficiency of the catalyst can be a result of increased covalency of the selenide anion along with a high d-electron density of the Ni center. The hydrothermally synthesized NiSe 2 sample also shows high activity for oxygen evolution through electrocatalytic water splitting in alkaline medium, effectively making it a bifunctional catalyst which can lower the concentration of the atmospheric pollutant CO 2 while at the same time enriching the air with O 2 . 
    more » « less
  3. Energy harvesting from solar and water has created ripples in materials energy research for the last several decades, complemented by the rise of Hydrogen as a clean fuel. Among these, water electrolysis leading to generation of oxygen and hydrogen, has been one of the most promising routes towards sustainable alternative energy generation and storage, with applications ranging from metal-​air batteries, fuel cells, to solar-​to-​fuel energy conversion systems. In fact, solar water splitting is one of the most promising method to produce Hydrogen without depleting fossil-​fuel based natural resources. However, the efficiency and practical feasibility of water electrolysis is limited by the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER)​, which is a kinetically sluggish, electron-​intensive uphill reaction. A slow OER process also slows the other half- cell reaction, i.e. the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) at the cathode. Hence, designing efficient catalysts for OER process from earth-​abundant resources has been one of the primary concerns for advancing solar water splitting. In the Nath group we have focused on transition metal chalcogenides as efficient OER electrocatalysts. We have proposed the idea that these chalcogenides, specifically, selenides and tellurides will show much better OER catalytic activity due to increasing covalency around the catalytically active transition metal site, compared to the oxides caused by decreasing electronegativity of the anion, which in turn leads to variation of chem. potential around the transition metal center, [e.g. lowering the Ni 2+ -​-​> Ni 3+ oxidn. potential in Ni-​based catalysts where Ni 3+ is the actually catalytically active species]​. Based on such hypothesis, we have synthesized a plethora of transition metal selenides including those based on Ni, Ni-​Fe, Co, and Ni-​Co, which show high catalytic efficiency characterized by low onset potential and overpotential at 10 mA​/cm 2 [Ni 3 Se 2 - 200 - 290 mV; Co 7 Se 8 - 260 mV; FeNi 2 Se 4 -​NrGO - 170 mV (NrGO - N-​doped reduced graphene oxide)​; NiFe 2 Se 4 - 210 mV; CoNi 2 Se 4 - 190 mV; Ni 3 Te 2 - 180 mV]​. 
    more » « less
  4. Designing efficient electrocatalysts has been one of the primary goals for water electrolysis, which is one of the most promising routes towards sustainable energy generation from renewable sources. In this article, we have tried to expand the family of transition metal chalcogenide based highly efficient OER electrocatalysts by investigating nickel telluride, Ni 3 Te 2 as a catalyst for the first time. Interestingly Ni 3 Te 2 electrodeposited on a GC electrode showed very low onset potential and overpotential at 10 mA cm −2 (180 mV), which is the lowest in the series of chalcogenides with similar stoichiometry, Ni 3 E 2 (E = S, Se, Te) as well as Ni-oxides. This observation falls in line with the hypothesis that increasing the covalency around the transition metal center enhances catalytic activity. Such a hypothesis has been previously validated in oxide-based electrocatalysts by creating anion vacancies. However, this is the first instance where this hypothesis has been convincingly validated in the chalcogenide series. The operational stability of the Ni 3 Te 2 electrocatalyst surface during the OER for an extended period of time in alkaline medium was confirmed through surface-sensitive analytical techniques such as XPS, as well as electrochemical methods which showed that the telluride surface did not undergo any corrosion, degradation, or compositional change. More importantly we have compared the catalyst activation step (Ni 2+ → Ni 3+ oxidation) in the chalcogenide series, through electrochemical cyclic voltammetry studies, and have shown that catalyst activation occurs at lower applied potential as the electronegativity of the anion decreases. From DFT calculations we have also shown that the hydroxyl attachment energy is more favorable on the Ni 3 Te 2 surface compared to the Ni-oxide, confirming the enhanced catalytic activity of the telluride. Ni 3 Te 2 also exhibited efficient HER catalytic activity in alkaline medium making it a very effective bifunctional catalyst for full water splitting with a cell voltage of 1.66 V at 10 mA cm −2 . It should be noted here that this is the first report of OER and HER activity in the family of Ni-tellurides. 
    more » « less