Subnano Polyhydroxylated C60 and Co-oxo Clusters Enable Accelerated Electron Kinetics for CO2 Photoreduction in Pure Water
Accelerating the electron kinetics is critical for enhancing the photocatalytic performance of CO2 conversion. Herein, polyhydroxylated C60 (C60OH, ∼1.8 nm) was molecularly decorated on boron-doped carbon nitride (BCN) nanosheets via a hydrogen-bonding assembly process. Subsequently, subnano Co-oxo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | ACS sustainable chemistry & engineering 2024-11, Vol.12 (49), p.17681-17692 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Accelerating the electron kinetics is critical for enhancing the photocatalytic performance of CO2 conversion. Herein, polyhydroxylated C60 (C60OH, ∼1.8 nm) was molecularly decorated on boron-doped carbon nitride (BCN) nanosheets via a hydrogen-bonding assembly process. Subsequently, subnano Co-oxo clusters (∼0.4 nm) were precisely deposited on the BCN counterpart using a photohole-induced approach. The optimized nanocomposite photocatalyst, featuring spatially separated dual subnano modifiers, exhibits a 10-fold CO2 conversion rate of that for BCN in pure water and nearly 100% selectivity toward CO by completely inhibiting H2 evolution. Notably, the apparent quantum yield reaches 3.51% (405 nm), surpassing that of representative cocatalyst-involved (boron-doped) carbon nitride-based photocatalysts under similar conditions. Femtosecond-transient absorption spectra reveal that C60OH and Co-oxo clusters can rapidly extract electrons and holes, respectively, with balanced transfer rates. Moreover, the hydroxyl groups of C60OH can serve as CO2 adsorption and catalytic sites, whereas Co-oxo clusters are capable of catalyzing water oxidation. The synergy between dual subnano modifiers effectively improves the electron kinetics, resulting in an electron transfer efficiency of 41.1% determined by in situ microsecond-transient absorption spectroscopy. This work provides a rational design strategy for developing advanced photocatalysts by modulating electron kinetics. |
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ISSN: | 2168-0485 2168-0485 |
DOI: | 10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c05851 |