RESUMO
The photocatalytic reduction of CO2 under solar irradiation is an ideal approach to mitigating global warming, and reducing aqueous forms of CO2 that interact strongly with a catalyst (e.g., HCO3-) is a promising strategy to expedite such reductions. This study uses Pt-deposited graphene oxide dots as a model photocatalyst to elucidate the mechanism of HCO3- reduction. The photocatalyst steadily catalyzes the reduction of an HCO3- solution (at pH = 9) containing an electron donor under 1-sun illumination over a period of 60 h to produce H2 and organic compounds (formate, methanol, and acetate). H2 is derived from solution-contained H2O, which undergoes photocatalytic cleavage to produce â¢H atoms. Isotopic analysis reveals that all of the organics formed via interactions between HCO3- and â¢H. This study proposes mechanistic steps, which are governed by the reacting behavior of the â¢H, to correlate the electron transfer steps and product formation of this photocatalysis. This photocatalysis achieves overall apparent quantum efficiency of 27% in the formation of reaction products under monochromatic irradiation at 420 nm. This study demonstrates the effectiveness of aqueous-phase photocatalysis in converting aqueous CO2 into valuable chemicals and the importance of H2O-derived â¢H in governing the product selectivity and formation kinetics.
RESUMO
This paper presents a heteroatom doping strategy to manipulate the structure of graphene-based photocatalysts for effective hydrogen production from aqueous solution. Oxygenation of graphene creates a bandgap to produce semiconducting graphene oxide, nitrogen doping extends the resonant π-conjugation to prolong the charge lifetime, and sulfur doping breaks the electron neutrality to facilitate charge transfer. Accordingly, ammonia-treated sulfur-nitrogen-co-doped graphene oxide dots (A-SNGODs) are synthesized by annealing graphene oxide sheets in sulfur-ammonia, oxidizing the sheets into dots, and then hydrothermally treating the dots in ammonia. The A-SNGODs exhibit a high nitrogen content in terms of quaternary and amide groups that are formed through sulfur-mediated reactions. The peripheral amide facilitates orbital conjugations to enhance the photocatalytic activity, whereas the quaternary nitrogen patches vacancy defects to improve stability. The simultaneous presence of electron-withdrawing S and electron-donating N atoms in the A-SNGODs facilitates charge separation and results in reactive electrons. When suspended in an aqueous triethanolamine solution, Pt-deposited A-SNGODs demonstrate a hydrogen-evolution quantum yield of 29% under monochromatic 420 nm irradiation. The A-SNGODs exhibit little activity decay under 6-day visible-light irradiation. This study demonstrates the excellence of the heteroatom-doping strategy in producing stable and active graphene-based materials for photoenergy conversion.