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Building Ultrathin MOL/MOL S‐Scheme Heterostructures toward Boosted Photocatalytic Charge Kinetics for Efficient H <sub>2</sub> Evolution

Qing‐Ping Huang, Chao Yang, Qi Yin, An‐An Zhang, Haixiong Liu, Lan Li, Meimei Liu, Zhi‐Bin Fang, Tian‐Fu Liu

2025Angewandte Chemie International Edition32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Photocatalytic efficiencies highly depend on the kinetic behaviors of photogenerated electrons in catalysts. Herein, based on the promising metal‐organic frameworks (MOFs), we design and build an advantageous architecture of ultrathin MOF‐layer (metal‐organic layers [MOL]) heterojunctions by a facile pH‐adjusted electrostatic assembling of pre‐exfoliated porphyrinic and pyrene‐based MOLs. Such an architecture constitutes an S‐scheme junction to drive interfacial charge separation, features ultrathin structures to shorten charge transfer distances, and maximizes accessible metal sites to facilitate terminal charge reaction, thoroughly promoting the charge kinetics in materials. The resulting MOL/MOL composites perform a significantly enhanced catalytic activity for visible‐light‐driven H 2 evolution, 8.5 and 106 times that of individual MOLs. Further fine‐tuning into more reactive metal nodes achieves an optimal H 2 production (2027 µmol h −1 g −1 ) with a high apparent quantum yield of 2.75% without additional cocatalysts, ranking among state‐of‐the‐art activities from all‐MOF photocatalysts. This work demonstrates an accessible and universal methodology to realize a superior ultrathin MOL/MOL heterojunction architecture toward accelerated charge kinetics, providing valuable insights for the development of efficient photocatalyst systems for solar‐to‐chemical energy conversions.

Topics & Concepts

PhotocatalysisHeterojunctionMaterials scienceKineticsCatalysisCharge carrierChemical engineeringPhotochemistryNanotechnologyOptoelectronicsChemistryPhysicsOrganic chemistryQuantum mechanicsEngineeringAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesMetal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and ApplicationsAdvanced Nanomaterials in Catalysis