Superlattice materials have emerged as promising candidates for water electrocatalysis due to their tunable crystal structures, electronic properties, and potential for interface engineering. However, the catalytic activity of transition metal-based superlattice materials for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is often constrained by their intrinsic electronic band structures, which can limit charge carrier mobility and active site availability. Herein, a highly efficient electrocatalyst based on a VS2-VS heterodimensional (2D-1D) superlattice with sulfur vacancies is designed addressing the limitations posed by the intrinsic electronic structure. The enhanced catalytic performance of the VS2-VS superlattice is primarily attributed to the engineered heterojunction, where the work function difference between the VS2 layer and VS chain induces a charge separation field that promotes efficient electron-hole separation. Introducing sulfur vacancies further amplifies this effect by inducing quantum localization of the separated electrons, thereby significantly boosting HER activity. Both theoretical and experimental results demonstrate that the superlattice achieves a ΔGH* of -0.06 eV and an impressively low overpotential of 46 mV at 10 mA·cm-2 in acidic media, surpassing the performance of commercial Pt/C while maintaining exceptional stability over 15 000 cycles. This work underscores the pivotal role of advanced material engineering in designing catalysts for sustainable energy applications.
Keywords: charge separation; heterodimensional superlattice; hydrogen evolution; quantum localization.
© 2024 The Author(s). Advanced Science published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH.