Confined growth of pyridinic N–Mo2C sites on MXenes for hydrogen evolution†
Abstract
Developing low-cost and high-performance hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) electrocatalysts is a key research area for scalable hydrogen production from water electrolysis. Here, a hybrid of nitrogen-doped carbon encapsulated Mo2C nanodots on Ti3C2Tx MXene (Mo2C/Ti3C2Tx@NC) is developed through in situ polymerization of dopamine and a Mo precursor on the Ti3C2Tx MXene surface. During the annealing treatment, the polydopamine plays multiple roles in forming N-doped carbon, confining MoO42− ions into ultrasmall Mo2C nanodots, and stabilizing the MXene flakes against spontaneous oxidation. The as-synthesized hybrid exhibits excellent HER activity in acidic electrolyte with an overpotential of 53 mV at 10 mA cm−2 and excellent stability over 30 hours. The combination of experiments and simulations demonstrates that pyridinic N-doped carbon coated Mo2C nanodots serve as the active sites and Ti3C2Tx MXene facilitates the charge transfer, synergistically contributing to the superior HER performance.
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