Smallest inorganic semiconductor enables eco-friendly hydrogen production

A research team has successfully produced eco-friendly solar hydrogen for the first time based on a quantum semiconductor nanocluster, which is the world's smallest inorganic semiconductor material.
The research is in the journal Nano Letters. The research was a collaboration with Professor Yoonjung Jang at the Department of Chemistry, Hanyang University, and Professor Stefan Ringe at the Department of Chemistry, Korea University, and Professor Jiwoong Yang at the Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology (DGIST).
Professor Yang's research team has achieved a stable nanocluster of cadmium selenide consisting of 26 atoms ((CdSe)鈧佲們), a sub-1-nm ultrasmall quantum semiconductor material that has never been previously used as a photocatalyst, in a water environment, applied it as a photocatalyst to successfully produce hydrogen, and suggested its potential for new applications across various fields, including not only energy and environment but also quantum science.
The quantum semiconductor nanocluster consisting of a specific number of atoms is a unique material located at the boundary between molecules and nanocrystals. While high reactivity as a catalyst is expected because most of its atoms are exposed on the surface, it is difficult to use it in practical applications due to its structural instability and poor electrical properties.
In this context, his research team designed and fabricated a superstructure in which a quantum nanocluster is self-arranged and bonded three-dimensionally, and obtained structural stability.
By cross-linking between ligands on the surface of the cluster, they achieved a stable structure while maintaining the properties of individual clusters. In addition, his team doped cobalt ions (Co虏鈦) within the cluster to enhance electrical properties and effectively induced photocatalytic hydrogen evolution.
"This study is the first of its kind to demonstrate that a quantum semiconductor nanocluster, known as the smallest inorganic semiconductor structure in existence, can be used as a photocatalyst," said Professor Yang at DGIST. "In the future, it is expected to expand into various possibilities in not just energy and environment but also quantum science."
More information: Soyeon Lee et al, Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production Using Semiconductor (CdSe)13 Clusters, Nano Letters (2025).
Journal information: Nano Letters