RESUMO
Photocatalytic generation of H2O2 from water and O2 is a promising strategy for liquid solar-fuel production. Previously reported powder photocatalysts promote a subsequent oxidative/reductive decomposition of the H2O2 generated, thereby producing low-H2O2-content solutions. This study reports that Nafion (Nf)-integrated resorcinol-formaldehyde (RF) semiconducting resin powders (RF@Nf), synthesized by polycondensation of resorcinol and formaldehyde with an Nf dispersion solution under high-temperature hydrothermal conditions, exhibit high photocatalytic activities and produce high-H2O2-content solutions. Nf acts as a surface stabilizer and suppresses the growth of RF resins. This generates small Nf-woven resin particles with large surface areas and efficiently catalyze water oxidation and O2 reduction. The Nf-woven resin surface, due to its hydrophobic nature, hinders the access of H2O2 and suppresses its subsequent decomposition. The simulated-sunlight irradiation of the resins in water under atmospheric pressure of O2 stably generates H2O2, producing high-H2O2-content solutions with more than 0.06 wt % H2O2 (16 mM).
RESUMO
Photocatalytic generation of H2O2 from water and O2 under sunlight is a promising artificial photosynthesis reaction to generate renewable fuel. We previously found that resorcinol-formaldehyde resin powders prepared with a high-temperature hydrothermal method become semiconductors comprising π-conjugated/π-stacked benzenoid-quinoid donor-acceptor resorcinol units and are active for photocatalytic H2O2 generation. Here, we have prepared phenol-resorcinol-formaldehyde resins with small amounts of phenol (â¼5 mol % relative to resorcinol), which show enhanced photocatalytic activity. Incorporating phenol bearing a single -OH group in the resin matrices relaxes the restriction on the arrangement of the aromatic rings originating from the H-bonding interactions between the resorcinol -OH groups. This creates stronger donor-acceptor π-stacking and increases the electron conductivity of the resins. We have demonstrated that simulated sunlight illumination of the resins in water under an atmospheric pressure of O2 stably generated H2O2 with more than 0.9% solar-to-chemical conversion efficiency.