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Core-Shell Structured MXene@Carbon Nanodots as Bifunctional Catalysts for Solar-Assisted Water Splitting.

Duong Nguyen NguyenGirish Sambhaji GundMin Gyu JungSeung Hun RohJongwook ParkJung Kyu KimHo Seok Park
Published in: ACS nano (2020)
The design of nonprecious bifunctional electrocatalysts with high activity and prolonged durability in a wide pH range is essential for the development of the highly efficient, cost-effective, and simplified overall water splitting systems. Here, we report core-shell structured MXene@carbon (MX@C) nanodot hybrids with high bifunctional activity, where N-doped carbon shells are grown in a heteroepitaxial manner strongly interacting with the MXene core. The resulting MX@C nanodot hybrids show enhanced catalytic activity for electrochemical hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) in various pH media from 0 to 14. At pH 14, MX@C achieves the low onset potential of 134 mV at 10 mA/cm2 and reduced Tafel slope of 32 mV/dec due to the facilitated charge transfer along the recombination reaction. For the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), MX@C nanodots are incorporated onto the surface of molybdenum-doped bismuth vanadate (Mo:BiVO4) as a cocatalyst of the photoanode, thereby achieving 1.5 times higher photocurrent density than pristine Mo:BiVO4 at 1.23 V (vs reversible hydrogen electrode) due to the enhanced light absorption and charge transfer efficiency. The superiority of this hybrid catalyst is demonstrated implementing the solar-assisted overall water splitting cells based on the MX@C cathode and MX@C/Mo:BiVO4 photoanode. These cells show the enhancement of current density from 0.78 to 1.23 mA/cm2 with long-term durability over 8 h. These results are attributed to the facile surface catalytic kinetics of the chemically and electronically coupled MX@C hybrid at the heterointerface for both OER and HER.
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