Electrochemical water splitting (EWS) is a promising way to attain H2, which has been deemed an ideal substitution for fossil fuels because of renewable and eco-friendly benefits. Developing an amorphous-based simple and structurally flexible non-noble catalyst to offer high performance for commercial applications has become a current interest. Amorphous cobalt-anchored nitrogen-doped carbon nanoparticles (Co@NC-NPs) were designed to have a low overpotential and Tafel as a bifunctional electrocatalyst (HER - 142 mV/80 mV dec-1 and OER - 250 mV/72 mV dec-1) to achieve 10 mA cm-2 in 1.0 KOH. FE-SEM and HR-TEM described the interconnected nanochain morphology and purity of Co@NC-NPs electrocatalyst, which were confirmed by EDX and elemental mapping. In a full cell water electrolyzer, Co@NC-NPs(+,-) may act as an anode and cathode electrode material to achieve 1.60 V @ 10 mA cm-2 in a wide pH. The efficient Co@NC-NPs are stable for 100 h without obvious recession. In solar cell applications, Co@NC-NPs(+,-) catalyst was employed as both positive and negative terminals and evolved enormous bubbles of O2 and H2. As previously mentioned, we covered the amorphization strategy with the optimistic role of structural flexibility and defects to enrich the active sites to improve the electrocatalytic stability. As a promising opinion, the amorphous electrocatalyst provides ultraefficiency for forthcoming developments in EWS.
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