Central to the success of liquid organic hydrogen carriers is finding dehydrogenation catalysts that selectively dissociate C-H bonds while preserving C-C bonds. This selectivity can be steered using p-block promoters like sulphur that sterically block unselective low coordinated catalytic sites while electronically modifying other active sites such that the binding of the dehydrogenation product is weakened. Promoters like sulphur are employed in industrial catalysts and their identity/concentration is determined by trial-and-error. Due to trade-offs between selectivity and reactivity, there is a need to systematically screen different promoters, determine their optimal coverages, and understand if promoters alter the nanoparticle morphology.