Defect engineering in MIL-125-(Ti)-NH for enhanced photocatalytic H generation
Pre-designing starting materials is a sensible approach to tailor the synthetic, optoelectronic, and physicochemical properties of a photocatalyst towards higher activity without the need for additional active species. MIL-125-(Ti)-NH 2 , a metal-organic framework (MOF) photocatalytically active for...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of materials chemistry. A, Materials for energy and sustainability Materials for energy and sustainability, 2023-04, Vol.11 (16), p.9143-9151 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pre-designing starting materials is a sensible approach to tailor the synthetic, optoelectronic, and physicochemical properties of a photocatalyst towards higher activity without the need for additional active species. MIL-125-(Ti)-NH
2
, a metal-organic framework (MOF) photocatalytically active for H
2
evolution, was first successfully synthesised at a relatively low temperature of 70 °C upon employing pre-designed titanium-oxo-carboxylate clusters. While rearrangement of the original cluster enabled successful MIL-125-(Ti)-NH
2
formation, its ligand stoichiometry favoured MOFs with abundant "defects" at the Ti centres which in turn acted as accessible active sites for H
2
generation. The catalytic sites and their local geometry were studied by pyridine-adsorbed Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray absorption near-edge structure, and extended X-ray absorption fine structure. Interestingly, the frameworks prepared using pre-designed titanium-oxo clusters can alter electronic optical properties and energy levels. In the presence of triethanolamine as an electron donor and under visible light irradiation, this led to a ∼3.5 times higher H
2
evolution rate in the titanium-oxo cluster MOF compared to MIL-125-(Ti)-NH
2
obtained by typical hydrothermal synthesis. The obtained catalyst also exhibits a good-reusable performance for at least three consecutive runs without any loss in its reactivity. Pre-designed clusters can be simply utilised to generate accessible active sites and manipulate electrical properties for enhancing catalytic performance.
Defect-containing MIL-125-(Ti)-NH
2
framework, simply prepared by using pre-designed Ti-clusters, can be utilised as an efficient photocatalyst in H
2
production. Its H
2
evolution rate activity was revealed ∼3.5 times higher than that of corresponding defect-free framework. |
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ISSN: | 2050-7488 2050-7496 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d2ta09963b |