ScholarMate
客服热线:400-1616-289

Van Der Waals gap-rich BiOCl atomic layers realizing efficient, pure-water CO2-to-CO photocatalysis

Shi, Yanbiao; Li, Jie*; Mao, Chengliang; Liu, Song; Wang, Xiaobing; Liu, Xiufan; Zhao, Shengxi; Liu, Xiao; Huang, Yanqiang; Zhang, Lizhi*
Science Citation Index Expanded
中国科学院

摘要

Photocatalytic CO2 reduction (PCR) is able to convert solar energy into chemicals, fuels, and feedstocks, but limited by the deficiencies of photocatalysts in steering photon-to-electron conversion and activating CO2, especially in pure water. Here we report an efficient, pure water CO2-to-CO conversion photocatalyzed by sub-3-nm-thick BiOCl nanosheets with van der Waals gaps (VDWGs) on the two-dimensional facets, a graphene-analog motif distinct from the majority of previously reported nanosheets usually bearing VDWGs on the lateral facets. Compared with bulk BiOCl, the VDWGs-rich atomic layers possess a weaker excitonic confinement power to decrease exciton binding energy from 137 to 36 meV, consequently yielding a 50-fold enhancement in the bulk charge separation efficiency. Moreover, the VDWGs facilitate the formation of VDWG-Bi-V-O(center dot center dot)-Bi defect, a highly active site to accelerate the CO2-to-CO transformation via the synchronous optimization of CO2 activation, *COOH splitting, and *CO desorption. The improvements in both exciton-to-electron and CO2-to-CO conversions result in a visible light PCR rate of 188.2 mu mol g(-1) h(-1) in pure water without any co-catalysts, hole scavengers, or organic solvents. These results suggest that increasing VDWG exposure is a way for designing high-performance solar-fuel generation systems. @@@ Efficient CO2 photoreduction in pure water remains challenging. Here, the authors propose to use van der Waals gaps-rich BiOCl atomic layers with low exciton binding energy and abundant surface oxygen vacancies for CO2 to CO conversion.

关键词

MOLECULAR-OXYGEN ACTIVATION CO2 REDUCTION EXCITON DISSOCIATION NANOSHEETS CONVERSION FACETS PHOTOREDUCTION CHALLENGES BIOBR