RESUMO
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is regarded as a potential technique for converting solar energy. However, the fast charge recombination and slow water oxidation kinetics significantly have hindered its practical application. It is found that an elevation in operation temperature can activate the charge transport in the photoanodes. Here, a strategy was performed that carbon nanoparticles were employed to TiO2 nanorods, acting as electron reservoirs as well as photothermal materials. More specifically, a record photocurrent density of 1.62 mA cm-2 at 1.23 V vs. RHE has been achieved, accompanied by a high charge separation efficiency of 96% and a long-term durability for 8 h. The detailed experimental results reveal that under NIR light irradiation, the synergistic effect between electron storage and temperature rise leads to accelerated charge transport in the bulk and water oxidation kinetics on the surface. This research offers a new perspective on how to boost the PEC performance of photoelectrodes.
RESUMO
Photoelectrochemical water splitting offers a promising approach for carbon neutrality, but its commercial prospects are still hampered by a lack of efficient and stable photoelectrodes with earth-abundant materials. Here, we report a strategy to construct an efficient photoanode with a coaxial nanobelt structure, comprising a buried-ZrS3/ZrOS n-p junction, for photoelectrochemical water splitting. The p-type ZrOS layer, formed on the surface of the n-type ZrS3 nanobelt through a pulsed-ozone-treatment method, acts as a hole collection layer for hole extraction and a protective layer to shield the photoanode from photocorrosion. The resulting ZrS3/ZrOS photoanode exhibits light harvesting with good photo-to-current efficiencies across the whole visible region to over 650 nm. By further employing NiOOH/FeOOH as the oxygen evolution reaction cocatalyst, the ZrS3/ZrOS/NiOOH/FeOOH photoanode yields a photocurrent density of ~9.3 mA cm-2 at 1.23 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode with an applied bias photon-to-current efficiency of ~3.2% under simulated sunlight irradiation in an alkaline solution (pH = 13.6). The conformal ZrOS layer enables ZrS3/ZrOS/NiOOH/FeOOH photoanode operation over 1000 hours in an alkaline solution without obvious performance degradation. This study, offering a promising approach to fabricate efficient and durable photoelectrodes with earth-abundant materials, advances the frontiers of photoelectrochemical water splitting.
RESUMO
Heterogenetization of molecular catalysts effectively resolves the separation issues of homogeneous catalysts and expands their application scenarios. In recent years, more and more studies have been using non-covalent interactions to achieve the heterogenization of molecular catalysts. Herein, electrostatic attraction was used to immobilize molecular catalysts, Ru-bda small molecular catalysts in COF materials, where the charged Ru-bda catalysts were immobilized in the oppositely charged COF with a high [Ru] loading content of ~0.2 mmol [Ru] g-1 COF. The leakage experiment verified that the immobilization of Ru-bda catalysts in COF by electrostatic interactions is stable in 0.1 M HClO4 and less than 5% of molecular Ru-bda catalysts were leached into the solution in 2 hours. The chemical water oxidation experiment was conducted as a model catalysis reaction to verify the feasibility of using electrostatic interactions for immobilizing Ru-bda catalysts in COFs. The prepared Ru(bda)@COFs demonstrate a high catalytic activity of 268 µmol L-1 s-1 O2 for chemical water oxidation, illustrating the electrostatic attractions between COF and small molecules that can be used to immobilize homogeneous catalysts in heterogeneous materials. However, the robustness of COF material itself under catalytic conditions should be considered in practical applications.
RESUMO
In the context of oxygen evolution reaction (OER), the construction of high-valent transition metal sites to trigger the lattice oxygen oxidation mechanism is considered crucial for overcoming the performance limitations of traditional adsorbate evolution mechanism. However, the dynamic evolution of lattice oxygen during the reaction poses significant challenges for the stability of high-valent metal sites, particularly in high-current-density water-splitting systems. Here, we have successfully constructed Co-O-Fe catalytic active motifs in cobalt-iron Prussian blue analogs (CoFe-PBA) through oxygen plasma bombardment, effectively activating lattice oxygen reactivity while sustaining robust stability. Our spectroscopic and theoretical studies reveal that the Co-O-Fe bridged motifs enable a unique double-exchange interaction between Co and Fe atoms, promoting the formation of high-valent Co species as OER active centers while maintaining Fe in a low-valent state, preventing its dissolution. The resultant catalyst (CoFe-PBA-30) requires an overpotential of only 276 mV to achieve 1000 mA cm-2. Furthermore, the assembled alkaline exchange membrane electrolyzer using CoFe-PBA-30 as anode material achieves a high current density of 1 A cm-2 at 1.76 V and continuously operates for 250 hours with negligible degradation. This work provides significant insights for activating lattice oxygen redox without compromising structure stability in practical water electrolyzers.
RESUMO
The efficiency of photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is hindered by the slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). This study developed a composite photoanode for water oxidation by incorporating ternary LDHs (ZnCoAl-LDH) onto Ti-Fe2O3 as a cocatalyst. The ZnCoAl-LDH/Ti-Fe2O3 photoanode achieved a photocurrent density of 3.51 mA/cm2 at 1.23 V vs. RHE, which is 9.8 times higher than that of bare Ti-Fe2O3. Through a series of characterizations, the synergistic effects among the three metals were revealed. Furthermore, the addition of Zn can induce the formation of more high-valent Co, increasing the conductivity of CoAl-LDH and significantly reducing the surface charge transfer resistance. These advantages significantly enhance the injection efficiency of ZnCoAl-LDH/Ti-Fe2O3 (82 %), thereby accelerating the OER kinetics of Ti-Fe2O3. Our work introduces new approaches for selecting photoelectrochemical cocatalysts and designing high-performance photoanodes for water splitting.
RESUMO
Manganese is a key metal involved in the catalysis of natural photosynthesis. Thus, the investigation of Mn-based electrocatalysts for water oxidation is of high importance. This work reports the doping of Mo into α-MnO2 nanorods to improve the water oxidation performance. The doping of Mo can transform the microstructure of α-MnO2 from nanorods into nanosphere superstructures. As a dopant, Mo expands the α-MnO2 lattice to result in a decrease in the average oxidation state of Mn and the generation of oxygen vacancies, which are beneficial to water oxidation catalysis. Under optimized doping, the OER overpotential of Mo/α-MnO2 is reduced by 80 mV (at 10 mA/cm2) compared with pure α-MnO2.
RESUMO
Solar-driven H2O2 production via the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and water oxidation reaction (WOR) dual channels is green and sustainable, but severely restricted by the sluggish reaction kinetics. Constructing intriguing photocatalysts with effective active centers is a shortcut to breaking the kinetic bottleneck with great significance. Herein, we synthesize two novel neutral phenanthridine-based covalent organic frameworks (PD-COF1 and PD-COF2) for photosynthesizing H2O2. Compared to the no phenanthridine counterpart (AN-COF), the H2O2 photosynthetic activities of PD-COF1 and PD-COF2 are markedly boosted. In air and pure water without sacrificial agents, under Xe lamp and natural sunlight, the H2O2 photogeneration rate of PD-COF2 is 6103 and 3646 µmol g-1 h-1, respectively. Further experimental and theoretical inspections demonstrate that introducing phenanthridine units into COFs smoothly modulates the charge carrier dynamics and thermodynamically favors the generation of crucial OOH* and OH* intermediates in the ORR and WOR paths, respectively. Additionally, this is the first time the neutral phenanthridine moiety serves as the photooxidation unit for 2e- WOR towards H2O2 photoproduction. The current work sheds light on exploring novel catalytic centers for high-performance H2O2 evolution.
RESUMO
Artificial photosynthesis of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) presents a promising environmentally friendly alternative to the industrial anthraquinone process. This work designed ultrathin metal-organic framework (MOF) nanosheets on which porphyrin ligand as an electron donor (D) and anthraquinone (AQ) as an electron acceptor (A) are integrated as the D-A complexes. The porphyrin component allows the MOF nanosheets to absorb full-spectrum solar light while the acceptor AQ motif promotes central aluminum ion coordination, hindering layer stacking to achieve a thickness of 1.0 nm. The ultrathin D-A design facilitates the separation of electrons from the MOF skeleton to the AQ motif, which induces the direct two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) mediated by the reversible redox couple of AQ-AQH2 and multielectron water oxidation reaction (WOR) driven by holes remaining on the porphyrin part. In O2-saturated water, the ultrathin MOF nanosheets outperformed the AQ-free bulk and multilayered counterparts by 2.9 and 2.6 times in H2O2 production, respectively, achieving the apparent quantum yield of 4.8% at 420 nm. It also surpasses other benchmark photocatalysts, including the typical MOF photocatalyst, MIL-125-NH2, and organic polymeric photocatalysts. The ultrathin D-A MOF photocatalyst generated H2O2 via both two-electron ORR as a major path and two-electron WOR as a minor path. This approach presents a promising strategy for the rational design of efficient nanostructured photocatalysts for solar fuels and chemicals.
RESUMO
The synthesis and characterization of a Co/Fe mixed-metal banana-shaped polyoxometalate with the formula [(Co2.5Fe0.5(H2O)PW9O34)2(PW6O26)]16- (Co5Fe) is reported. This transition-metal-substituted polyoxometalate readily assembles from its components in a one-pot reaction and crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P21/c. The structure of Co5Fe can be considered a double sandwich composed by two B-α-{Co2.5Fe0.5PW9O40} Keggin units, in which one coordinatively saturated octahedral metal position is equally occupied by Co(II) and Fe(III) ions with a 50% of site occupancy. These Keggin units are linked via a hexalacunary Keggin unit {PW6O26}. Single crystal X-ray diffraction and magnetic measurements support the proposed atom arrangement within the crystal structure. Magnetic measurements of these double trimeric unit {Co2.5Fe0.5O13}2 show a combination of antiferromagnetic interaction, the presence of spin frustration, and the first-order spin-orbit coupling Co(II) ions. Electrocatalytic water oxidation measurements show that Co5Fe displays low stability in both homogeneous and heterogeneous conditions. This is evidenced by the constant increase on the catalytic currents over time together with the appearance of polyoxometalate-derived electrode-bound species that can be responsible for the observed catalytic activity.
RESUMO
Exploring single-atom-catalysts for the acidic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is of paramount importance for cost-effective hydrogen production via acidic water electrolyzers. However, the limited durability of most single-atom-catalysts and Ir/Ru-based oxides under harsh acidic OER conditions, primarily attributed to excessive lattice oxygen participation resulting in metal-leaching and structural collapse, hinders their practical application. Herein, an innovative strategy is developed to fabricate short-range Ir single-atom-ensembles (IrSAE) stabilized on the surface of Mn-substituted spinel Co3O4 (IrSAE-CMO), which exhibits excellent mass activity and significantly improved durability (degradation-rate: ≈2 mV h-1), outperforming benchmark IrO2 (≈44 mV h-1) and conventional Irsingle-atoms on pristine-Co3O4 for acidic OER. First-principle calculations reveal that Mn-substitution in the octahedral sites of Co3O4 substantially reduces the migration energy barrier for Irsingle-atoms on the CMO surface compared to pristine-Co3O4, facilitating the migration of Irsingle-atoms to form strongly correlated IrSAE during pyrolysis. Extensive ex situ characterization, operando X-ray absorption and Raman spectroscopies, pH-dependence activity tests, and theoretical calculations indicate that the rigid IrSAE with appropriate Ir-Ir distance stabilized on the CMO surface effectively suppresses lattice oxygen participation while promoting direct OâO radical coupling, thereby mitigating Ir-dissolution and structural collapse, boosting the stability in an acidic environment.
RESUMO
Modifying photoanodes with metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as oxygen evolution reaction (OER) cocatalysts has emerged as a promising approach to enhance the efficiency of photoelectrochemical (PEC) water oxidation. However, designing OER-active MOFs with both high photo- and electrochemical stability remains a challenge, limiting the advancement of this research. Herein, we present a facile method to fabricate a MOF-modified photoanode by directly loading a pentanuclear Co-based MOF (Co-MOF) onto the surface of a Ti-doped hematite photoanode (Ti:Fe2O3). The resulting Co-MOF/Ti:Fe2O3 modified photoanode exhibits an enhanced photocurrent density of 1.80 mAâcm-2 at 1.23 V, surpassing those of the Ti:Fe2O3 (1.53 mAâcm-2) and bare Fe2O3 (0.59 mAâcm-2) counterparts. Additionally, significant enhancements in charge injection and separation efficiencies, applied bias photon-to-current efficiency (ABPE), incident photon to current conversion efficiency (IPCE), and donor density (Nd) were observed. Notably, a minimal photocurrent decay of only 5% over 10 h demonstrates the extraordinary stability of the Co-MOF/Ti:Fe2O3 photoanode. This work highlights the efficacy of polynuclear Co-based MOFs as OER cocatalysts in designing efficient and stable photoanodes for PEC water splitting applications.
RESUMO
Bismuth vanadate (BVO) having suitable band edges is one of the effective photocatalysts for water oxidation, which is the rate-determining step in the water splitting process. Incorporating cocatalysts can reduce activation energy, create hole sinks, and improve photocatalytic ability of BVO. In this work, the visible light active nickel tellurium oxide (NTO) is used as the cocatalyst on the BVO photoanode to improve photocatalytic properties. Different NTO amounts are deposited on the BVO to balance optical and electrical contributions. Higher visible light absorbance and effective charge cascades are developed in the NTO and BVO composite (NTO/BVO). The highest photocurrent density of 6.05 mA/cm2 at 1.23 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (VRHE) and the largest applied bias photon-to-current efficiency (ABPE) of 2.13% are achieved for NTO/BVO, while BVO shows a photocurrent density of 4.19 mA/cm2 at 1.23 VRHE and ABPE of 1.54%. Excellent long-term stability under light illumination is obtained for NTO/BVO with photocurrent retention of 91.31% after 10,000 s. The photoelectrochemical catalytic mechanism of NTO/BVO is also proposed based on measured band structures and possible interactions between NTO and BVO. This work has depicted a novel cocatalytic BVO system with a new photocharging material and successfully achieves high photocurrent densities for catalyzing water oxidation.
RESUMO
Light-induced water splitting (hν-WS) for the production of hydrogen as a solar fuel is considered a promising sustainable strategy for the replacement of fossil fuels. An efficient system for hν-WS involves a photoactive material that, upon shining light, is capable of separating and transferring charges to catalysts for the hydrogen and oxygen evolution processes. Covalent triazine-based frameworks (CTFs) represent an interesting class of 2D organic light-absorbing materials that have recently emerged thanks to their tunable structural, optical and morphological properties. Typically, catalysts (Cat) are metallic nanoparticles generated in situ after photoelectroreduction of metal precursors or directly drop-casted on top of the CTF material to generate Cat-CTF assemblies. In this work, the synthesis, characterization and photocatalytic performance of a novel hybrid material, Ru-CTF, is reported, based on a CTF structure featuring dangling pyridyl groups that allow the Ru-tda (tda is [2,2':6',2'"-terpyridine]-6,6'"-dicarboxylic acid) water oxidation catalyst (WOC) unit to coordinate via covalent bond. The Ru-CTF molecular hybrid material can carry out the light-induced water oxidation reaction efficiently at neutral pH, reaching values of maximum TOF of 17 h-1 and TONs in the range of 220 using sodium persulfate as a sacrificial electron acceptor.
RESUMO
The construction of solar-to-chemical conversion system by mimicking the photosynthetic network of the chloroplast holds great promise on efficient solar energy utilization. We developed an artificial photosynthetic cell (APC) based on molecular biomimetic thylakoid (CoTPP-FePy) to split water into hydrogen and oxygen (H2 and O2) at low driving voltage (1.1 V) and neutral condition (pH≈7). The CoTPP-FePy can emulate the light reaction in thylakoids to produce O2 by coupling light harvesting, photocatalysis, and electron/energy storage (FeIII/FeII-Py). Subsequently, a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) were employed to simulate the dark reaction, wherein the proton, electron and energy generated by the light reaction can drive the H2 producing process. By a temporally and spatially coupling of the light and dark reactions, the resulting APC achieved a solar conversion efficiency of 3.1%, exceeding that of natural photosynthetic systems and demonstrating the potential of artificial photosynthesis.
RESUMO
Achieving robust long-term durability with high catalytic activity at low iridium loading remains one of great challenges for proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer (PEMWE). Herein, we report the low-temperature synthesis of iridium oxide foam platelets comprising edge-sharing IrO6 octahedral honeycomb framework, and demonstrate the structural advantages of this material for multilevel tuning of anodic catalyst layer across atomic-to-microscopic scales for PEMWE. The integration of IrO6 octahedral honeycomb framework, foam-like texture and platelet morphology into a single material system assures the generation and exposure of highly active and stable iridium catalytic sites for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), while facilitating the reduction of both mass transport loss and electronic resistance of catalyst layer. As a proof of concept, the membrane electrode assembly in single-cell PEMWE based on honeycomb-structured IrOx foam platelets, with a low iridium loading (~0.3 mgIr/cm2), is demonstrated to exhibit high catalytic activity at ampere-level current densities and to remain stable for more than 2000 hours.
RESUMO
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a crucial chemical applied in various industry sectors. However, the current industrial anthraquinone process for H2O2 synthesis is carbon-intensive. With sunlight and renewable electricity as energy inputs, photocatalysis and electrocatalysis have great potential for green H2O2 production from oxygen (O2) and water (H2O). Herein, we review the advances in pairing two-electron O2 reduction and two-electron H2O oxidation reactions for dual-pathway H2O2 synthesis. The basic principles, paired redox reactions, and catalytic device configurations are introduced initially. Aligning with the energy input, the latest photocatalysts, electrocatalysts, and photo-electrocatalysts for dual-pathway H2O2 production are discussed afterward. Finally, we outlook the research opportunities in the future. This minireview aims to provide insights and guidelines for the broad community who are interested in catalyst design and innovative technology for on-site H2O2 synthesis.
RESUMO
α-Fe2O3 is a very attractive photoanode for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water decomposition. However, its short diffusion length, poor conductivity, and fast charge-carrier recombination severely limit device efficiency. Here, coloading an Al2O3 passivation layer and a CoOx cocatalyst onto Ti-doped α-Fe2O3 was carried out to promote PEC water oxidation by improving charge separation and transfer at the electrode/electrolyte interface and inhibiting photocarrier recombination. The optimized Ti:Fe2O3/Al2O3/CoOx photoanode shows a large photocurrent density of 1.41 mA cm-2 at 1.23 V vs reversible hydrogen electrode, which is 47 times greater than that of a pristine Ti:Fe2O3 photoanode. The dual modifications with a combined passivation layer and cocatalyst on the photoanode verify a valuable way for solar energy conversion in PEC water oxidation.
RESUMO
Bismuth vanadate ranks among the most promising photoanodes for photoelectrochemical water splitting. Nonetheless, slow charge separation and transport are key barriers to its photoefficiency. Here, we present a co-doping strategy that significantly improves the charge separation performance of BVO. Under standard one sun illumination, the Fe-N co-doped BVO photoanode (Fe-N-BVO) by N-coordinated Fe precursor reaches a record photocurrent density of 7.01 mA cm-2 at 1.23 V vs RHE after modified a surface co-catalyst. By contrast, much lower photocurrent density is obtained for the N-doped and Fe-doped BVO with separated N and Fe precursors. The detailed characterizations show that the high activity of the Fe-N-BVO is attributed to the enhanced photo-induced bulk charge separation and the accelerated surface water oxidation kinetics. XPS, EXAFS and DFT calculations clearly show that, instead of formation of deep trapping state in the individually doped BVO, the co-doping of Fe-N into BVO generates Fe-based electronic states just below the bottom of conduction band and N-derived states just above the top of valence band. Such modulations in electronic structure enable the efficient trap of the electrons and holes to enhance the separation of photo-induced carriers, but hinder the charge recombination originated from the deep trapping sites.
RESUMO
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is attracting significant research interest in addressing sustainable development goals in renewable energy. Current state-of-the-art, however, cannot provide photoanodes with simultaneously high efficiency and long-lasting lifetime. Here, large-scale NiFe oxyhydroxides-alloy hybridized co-catalyst layer that exhibits an applied bias photon-to-current efficiency (ABPE) of 4.24% in buried homojunction-free photoanodes and stability over 250 h is reported. These performances represent an increase over the present highest-performing technology by 408% in stability and the most stable competitor by over 330% in efficiency. These results originate from a previously unexplored mechanism of light-induced atomic reconfiguration, which rapidly self-generates a catalytic-protective amorphous/crystalline heterostructure at low biases. This mechanism provides active sites for reaction and insulates the photoanode from performance degradation. Photon-generated NiFe oxyhydroxides are more than 200% higher than the quantity that pure electrocatalysis would otherwise induce, overcoming the threshold for an efficient water oxidation reaction in the device. While of immediate interest in the industry of water splitting, the light-induced NiFe oxyhydroxides-alloy co-catalyst developed in this work provides a general strategy to enhance further the performances and stability of PEC devices for a vast panorama of chemical reactions, ranging from biomass valorization to organic waste degradation, and CO2-to-fuel conversion.
RESUMO
The electrosynthesis of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) from O2 or H2O via the two-electron (2e-) oxygen reduction (2e- ORR) or water oxidation (2e- WOR) reaction provides a green and sustainable alternative to the traditional anthraquinone process. Herein, a paired-electrosynthesis tactic is reported for concerted H2O2 production at a high rate by coupling the 2e- ORR and 2e- WOR, in which the bifunctional oxygen-vacancy-enriched Bi2O3 nanorods (Ov-Bi2O3-EO), obtained through electrochemically oxidative reconstruction of Bi-based metal-organic framework (Bi-MOF) nanorod precursor, are used as both efficient anodic and cathodic electrocatalysts, achieving concurrent H2O2 production at both electrodes with high Faradaic efficiencies. Specifically, the coupled 2e- ORR//2e- WOR electrolysis system based on such distinctive oxygen-defect Bi catalyst displays excellent performance for the paired-electrosynthesis of H2O2, delivering a remarkable cell Faradaic efficiency of 154.8% and an ultrahigh H2O2 production rate of 4.3 mmol h-1 cm-2. Experiments combined with theoretical analysis reveal the crucial role of oxygen vacancies in optimizing the adsorption of intermediates associated with the selective two-electron reaction pathways, thereby improving the activity and selectivity of the 2e- reaction processes at both electrodes. This work establishes a new paradigm for developing advanced electrocatalysts and designing novel paired-electrolysis systems for scalable and sustainable H2O2 electrosynthesis.