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Insight into the Light-Driven Hydrogen Production over Pure and Rh-Doped Rutile in the Presence of Ascorbic Acid: Impact of Interfacial Chemistry on Photocatalysts

Jifang Zhang, Jiaming Wang, Yecheng Tang, Kaiwei Liu, Boyang Zhang, Guijun Ma

2022ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces19 citationsDOI

Abstract

The surface states of a semiconductor photocatalyst are essential for interfacial charge transfer in heterogeneous photocatalytic reactions. Here, we report that the light-driven hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity of 0.5 mol % Rh-doped rutile increases by more than 30 times compared with that of rutile when ascorbic acid is used as a sacrificial agent. Intensity-modulated photocurrent spectroscopy and surface photovoltage spectroscopy are employed to reveal the impact of surface states on the photo-oxidation reactions. It is found that the adsorption of ascorbic acid molecules dramatically reduces the activity of rutile due to coverage of the HER-active Ti sites. Nevertheless, for Rh-doped rutile, ascorbic acid neutralizes the Rh(IV) sites that would otherwise cause severe recombination of electron-hole pairs and resurrects its photocatalytic performance. This work demonstrates the key role of interfacial chemistry in photocatalytic reactions and provides a strategy for excavating the potential of various photocatalysts.

Topics & Concepts

Ascorbic acidRutilePhotocatalysisMaterials sciencePhotocurrentPhotochemistrySurface photovoltageHydrogen productionDopingCatalysisTitanium dioxideAdsorptionSpectroscopyChemical engineeringInorganic chemistryChemistryPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryOptoelectronicsEngineeringQuantum mechanicsFood scienceMetallurgyPhysicsAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCopper-based nanomaterials and applications
Insight into the Light-Driven Hydrogen Production over Pure and Rh-Doped Rutile in the Presence of Ascorbic Acid: Impact of Interfacial Chemistry on Photocatalysts | Litcius