Summary: | Unraveling the role of transition-metal doping in affecting the native spinel-structured nanosheets' water splitting remains a grand challenge. In this work, a series of spinel-structured nanosheets wrapped hollow nitrogen-doped carbon polyhedrons were constructed, and doped transition-metal domains were deliberately introduced on the surface. Theoretical investigations show that their energy level can be finely tuned via direct transition-metal doping engineering. As a prototype, an Fe-doped NiCo₂O₄ nanosheets wrapped hollow nitrogen-doped carbon polyhedron (Fe–NiCo₂O₄@HNCP) exhibits outstanding bifunctional electrocatalytic performances with low overpotentials (η = 270 mV for OER, η = 84 mV for HER), low Tafel slopes (b = 42 mV dec⁻¹ for OER, b = 47 mV dec⁻¹ for HER), and high durability. The enhanced performance is attributed to the synergistic effects of energy level matching for electron transfer, and partial charge delocalization-induced rich active sites for reactant adsorption via thermodynamic and kinetic acceleration. This work may open a new pathway to design highly active and stable transition-metal doped electrocatalysts by manipulated energy levels for efficient overall water splitting.
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