Premium
Topotactic Engineering of Ultrathin 2D Nonlayered Nickel Selenides for Full Water Electrolysis
Author(s) -
Wu Hao,
Lu Xin,
Zheng Gengfeng,
Ho Ghim Wei
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.201702704
Subject(s) - electrocatalyst , materials science , nickel , oxygen evolution , water splitting , tafel equation , electrolysis , hydroxide , bifunctional , electrochemistry , layered double hydroxides , nanotechnology , selenide , nanomaterials , chemical engineering , electrolyte , catalysis , inorganic chemistry , electrode , chemistry , metallurgy , biochemistry , selenium , photocatalysis , engineering
Fabrication of ultrathin 2D nonlayered nanomaterials remains challenging, yet significant due to the new promises in electrochemical functionalities. However, current strategies are largely restricted to intrinsically layered materials. Herein, a combinatorial self‐regulating acid etching and topotactic transformation strategy is developed to unprecedentedly prepare vertically stacked ultrathin 2D nonlayered nickel selenide nanosheets. Due to the inhibited hydrolyzation under acidic conditions, the self‐regulating acid etching results in ultrathin layered nickel hydroxides (two layers). The ultrathin structure allows limited epitaxial extension during selenization, i.e., the nondestructive topotactic transformation, enabling facile artificial engineering of hydroxide foundation frameworks into ultrathin nonlayered selenides. Consequently, the exquisite nonlayered nickel selenide affords high turnover frequencies, electrochemical surface areas, exchange current densities, and low Tafel slopes, as well as facilitating charge transfer toward both oxygen and hydrogen evolution reactions. Thus, the kinetically favorable bifunctional electrocatalyst delivers advanced and robust overall water splitting activities in alkaline intermediates. The integrated methodology may open up a new pathway for designing other highly active 2D nonlayered electrocatalysts.