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Single-Atom Cu Channel and N-Vacancy Engineering Enables Efficient Charge Separation and Transfer between C<sub>3</sub>N<sub>4</sub> Interlayers for Boosting Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production

Jiachao Shen, Chenghui Luo, Shanshan Qiao, Yuqing Chen, Yanhong Tang, Jieqiong Xu, Kaixing Fu, Dingwang Yuan, Haifang Tang, Hao Zhang, Chengbin Liu

2023ACS Catalysis197 citationsDOI

Abstract

Polymeric carbon nitride (C 3 N 4 ) has attracted great attention in photocatalysis due to its low-cost, visible-light response, and environment-friendly merits. However, the catalytic efficiency of pristine bulk C 3 N 4 is severely limited by its poor photoinduced electron/hole pair separation and interlayer charge transport. Herein, single-atom Cu is bridged into C 3 N 4 sheet interlayers through the thermal condensation of self-assembly supramolecules of Cu precursors and melamine–cyanuric acid monomers. Simultaneously, N vacancies are engineered into C 3 N 4 only by gradient temperature. The single-atom Cu bridges serve as electron channels to promote photoinduced electron/hole pair separation and interlayer charge transport. The experimental results and calculations demonstrate that N vacancies break the symmetry of pristine C 3 N 4, allowing more electrons to pass through the delocalized π-conjugated network of C 3 N 4 to Cu sites, which facilitates charge transfer between C 3 N 4 layers, resulting in more effective separation of electron/hole pairs, optimal charge distribution, and lower hydrogen evolution barrier. As a result, the photocatalyst at a stationary point with a 1 wt % Pt cocatalyst presents a high visible-light photocatalytic hydrogen production rate (11.23 mmol g –1 h –1 ), reaching a high apparent quantum yield of 31.60% at 420 nm. It is noted that the photocatalyst still exhibits a high hydrogen production rate of 605.15 μmol g –1 h –1 in the absence of the Pt cocatalyst.

Topics & Concepts

PhotocatalysisMaterials sciencePhotoinduced charge separationGraphitic carbon nitrideHydrogen productionCarbon nitrideQuantum efficiencyPhotochemistryHydrogenCatalysisOptoelectronicsChemistryArtificial photosynthesisOrganic chemistryAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesCopper-based nanomaterials and applicationsZnO doping and properties
Single-Atom Cu Channel and N-Vacancy Engineering Enables Efficient Charge Separation and Transfer between C<sub>3</sub>N<sub>4</sub> Interlayers for Boosting Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production | Litcius