Optically selective catalyst design with minimized thermal emission for facilitating photothermal catalysis

Converting solar energy into fuels is pursued as an attractive route to reduce dependence on fossil fuel. In this context, photothermal catalysis is a very promising approach through converting photons into heat to drive catalytic reactions. There are mainly three key factors that govern the phototh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-09, Vol.15 (1), p.7599-10, Article 7599
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Zhengwei, Wu, Zhen-Yu, Lin, Zhexing, Liu, Tianji, Ding, Liping, Zhai, Wenbo, Chen, Zipeng, Jiang, Yi, Li, Jinlei, Ren, Siyun, Lin, Zhenhui, Liu, Wangxi, Feng, Jianyong, Zhang, Xing, Li, Wei, Yu, Yi, Zhu, Bin, Ding, Feng, Li, Zhaosheng, Zhu, Jia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Converting solar energy into fuels is pursued as an attractive route to reduce dependence on fossil fuel. In this context, photothermal catalysis is a very promising approach through converting photons into heat to drive catalytic reactions. There are mainly three key factors that govern the photothermal catalysis performance: maximized solar absorption, minimized thermal emission and excellent catalytic property of catalyst. However, the previous research has focused on improving solar absorption and catalytic performance of catalyst, largely neglected the optimization of thermal emission. Here, we demonstrate an optically selective catalyst based Ti 3 C 2 T x Janus design, that enables minimized thermal emission, maximized solar absorption and good catalytic activity simultaneously, thereby achieving excellent photothermal catalytic performance. When applied to Sabatier reaction and reverse water-gas shift (RWGS) as demonstrations, we obtain an approximately 300% increase in catalytic yield through reducing the thermal emission of catalyst by ~70% under the same irradiation intensity. It is worth noting that the CO 2 methanation yield reaches 3317.2 mmol g Ru −1 h −1 at light power of 2 W cm −2 , setting a performance record among catalysts without active supports. We expect that this design opens up a new pathway for the development of high-performance photothermal catalysts. Photothermal catalysis, which converts photons into heat to drive catalytic reactions, is a highly promising approach. Here, the authors demonstrate an optically selective catalyst based on a Ti 3 C 2 T x Janus design which minimizes thermal emission, maximizes solar absorption, and maintains good catalytic activity, resulting in excellent photothermal catalytic performance.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-51896-4