TiO<sub>2</sub>@COF Nanowire Arrays: A “Filter Amplifier” Heterojunction Strategy to Reverse the Redox Nature
Xiaopeng Cheng, Yingyi Wen, Wenhua Li, Zhihua Fu, Guan‐E Wang, Gang Xu
Abstract
Surface modification is a promising method to change the surface properties of nanomaterials, but it is limited in enhancing their intrinsic redox nature. In this work, a “filter amplifier” strategy is proposed for the first time to reverse the intrinsic redox nature of materials. This is demonstrated by coating a COF-316 layer with controlled thickness on TiO 2 to form core–sheath nanowire arrays. This unique structure forms a Z-scheme heterojunction to function as “a filter amplifier” which can conceal the intrinsic oxidative sites and increase the extrinsic reductive sites. Consequently, the selective response of TiO 2 is dramatically reversed from reductive ethanol and methanol to oxidative NO 2 . Moreover, TiO 2 @COF-316 provides remarkably improved sensitivity, response, and recovery speed, as well as unusual anti-humidity properties as compared with TiO 2 . This work not only provides a new strategy to rationally modulate the surface chemistry properties of nanomaterials but also opens an avenue to design high-performance electronic devices with a Z-scheme heterojunction.