hydrogen evolution using sustainably produced electricity has promised a carbonfree production of a chemical fuel. [5] However, most commercial hydrogen is still produced via steam reforming of methane because there are few scalable base-metal replacements for platinum at the scales required for electrocatalysis. [6] Dimensional reduction of 3D materials to 0D, 1D, or 2D nanostructures (thickness vs lateral size < 1%), [7,8] has attracted interest for discovering intriguing new catalytic properties. Notably, including 2D nanostructures comprised of metals, [9] transition metal dichalcogenides, [10][11][12] transition metal oxides, [13,14] and 2D transition metal carbides (TMCs) [15] have been explored for enhanced catalytic performance, and advances in this area have led to reliable and cost-effective fabrication methods ideal for base-metal hydrogen evolution catalysts.Among these materials, 2D TMCs possess excellent electrical conductivity, electrochemical activity, high surface area, and strong chemical resilience. [16] These make them particularly desirable for various clean energy applications such as energy storage [17][18][19] and catalysis. [7,15] The most widely applied method toward 2D TMCs requires a selective etching process from their Low-dimensional (0/1/2 dimension) transition metal carbides (TMCs) possess intriguing electrical, mechanical, and electrochemical properties, and they serve as convenient supports for transition metal catalysts. Large-area single-crystalline 2D TMC sheets are generally prepared by exfoliating MXene sheets from MAX phases. Here, a versatile bottom-up method is reported for preparing ultrathin TMC sheets (≈10 nm in thickness and >100 μm in lateral size) with metal nanoparticle decoration. A gelatin hydrogel is employed as a scaffold to coordinate metal ions (Mo 5+ , W 6+ , Co 2+ ), resulting in ultrathin-film morphologies of diverse TMC sheets. Carbonization of the scaffold at 600 °C presents a facile route to the corresponding MoC x , WC x , CoC x , and to metal-rich hybrids (Mo 2−x W x C and W/Mo 2 C-Co). Among these materials, the Mo 2 C-Co hybrid provides excellent hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) efficiency (Tafel slope of 39 mV dec −1 and 48 mV j = 10 mA cm −2 in overpotential in 0.5 m H 2 SO 4 ). Such performance makes Mo 2 C-Co a viable noble-metal-free catalyst for the HER, and is competitive with the standard platinum on carbon support. This template-assisted, self-assembling, scalable, and low-cost manufacturing process presents a new tactic to construct low-dimensional TMCs with applications in various cleanenergy-related fields.
Hydrogen ElectrocatalysisThe ORCID identification number(s) for the author(s) of this article can be found under https://doi.