Water splitting is the most potential method to produce hydrogen energy, however, the conventional electrocatalysts encounter the hindrances of high overpotential and low hydrogen production efficiency. Herein, we report a carbon-based nanocomposite (denoted as CCW-x, x stands for the calcination temperature) derived from watermelon peels and CoCl2, and the as-synthesized CCW-x is used as the electrocatalyst. The overpotential and the Tafel slope of CCW-700 for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is 237 mV at 10 mA cm-2 and 69.8 mV dec-1, respectively, both of which are lower than those of commercial RuO2. For hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), the overpotential of CCW-700 (111 mV) is higher than that of the widely studied Pt/C (73 mV) but still lower than those of lots of carbon-based nanomaterials (122-177 mV). In the light of CCW-700 is highly active for both OER and HER, we assembled a water-splitting electrocatalyst by employing nickel foam loaded with CCW-700 as the anode and cathode in 1 M KOH. The water-splitting voltage is only 1.54 V for the CCW-700//CCW-700 electrodes and 1.62 V for the RuO2//Pt/C ones. Therefore, the so-denoted CCW-x powder possesses good electrocatalytic hydrogen production efficiency.
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