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1.
ACS Omega ; 8(44): 41809-41815, 2023 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37970046

ABSTRACT

The development of a photocatalyst capable of evolving H2 from water under visible light is important. Here, the photocatalytic activity of N/F-codoped rutile TiO2 (TiO2:N,F) for H2 evolution was examined with respect to metal cocatalyst loading and irradiation conditions. Among the metal species examined, Pd was the best-performing cocatalyst for TiO2:N,F under UV-vis irradiation (λ > 350 nm), producing H2 from an aqueous methanol solution. The H2 evolution activity was also dependent on the state of the loaded Pd species on the TiO2:N,F, which varied depending on the preparation conditions. Pd/TiO2:N,F prepared by an impregnation-H2 reduction method, showed the highest performance. However, the activity of the optimized Pd/TiO2:N,F toward H2 evolution from an aqueous methanol solution was negligibly small under visible-light irradiation (λ > 400 nm), although the use of an ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid disodium salt as an electron donor resulted in observable H2 evolution. Transient absorption spectroscopy revealed that although a relatively large population of reactive electrons was generated in the TiO2:N,F under 355 nm UV-pulse photoexcitation, the density of reactive electrons generated under 480 nm visible light was lower. This wavelength-dependent behavior in photogenerated charge carrier dynamics could explain the different photocatalytic activities of the TiO2:N,F catalysts under different irradiation conditions.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(36): 19759-19767, 2023 Sep 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37649142

ABSTRACT

α-FAPbI3 (FA+ = CH(NH2)2+) with a cubic perovskite structure is promising for photophysical applications. However, α-FAPbI3 is metastable at room temperature, and it transforms to the δ-phase at a certain period of time at room temperature. Herein, we report a thiocyanate-stabilized pseudo-cubic perovskite FAPbI3 with ordered columnar defects (α'-phase). This compound has a √5ap × âˆš5ap × ap tetragonal unit cell (ap: cell parameter of primitive perovskite cell) with a band gap of 1.91 eV. It is stable at room temperature in a dry atmosphere. Furthermore, the presence of the α'-phase in a mixed sample with the δ-phase drastically reduces the δ-to-α transition temperature measured on heating, suggesting the reduction of the nucleation energy of the α-phase or thermodynamic stabilization of the α-phase through epitaxy. The defect-ordered pattern in the α'-phase forms a coincidence-site lattice at the twinned boundary of the single crystals, thus hinting at an epitaxy- or strain-based mechanism of α-phase formation and/or stabilization. In this study, we developed a new strategy to control defects in halide perovskites and provided new insight into the stabilization of α-FAPbI3 by pseudo-halide and grain boundary engineering.

3.
Sci Adv ; 8(32): eadc9115, 2022 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35947708

ABSTRACT

While dye-sensitized metal oxides are good candidates as H2 evolution photocatalysts for solar-driven Z-scheme water splitting, their solar-to-hydrogen (STH) energy conversion efficiencies remain low because of uncontrolled charge recombination reactions. Here, we show that modification of Ru dye-sensitized, Pt-intercalated HCa2Nb3O10 nanosheets (Ru/Pt/HCa2Nb3O10) with both amorphous Al2O3 and poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS) improves the STH efficiency of Z-scheme overall water splitting by a factor of ~100, when the nanosheets are used in combination with a WO3-based O2 evolution photocatalyst and an I3-/I- redox mediator, relative to an analogous system that uses unmodified Ru/Pt/HCa2Nb3O10. By using the optimized photocatalyst, PSS/Ru/Al2O3/Pt/HCa2Nb3O10, a maximum STH of 0.12% and an apparent quantum yield of 4.1% at 420 nm were obtained, by far the highest among dye-sensitized water splitting systems and comparable to conventional semiconductor-based suspended particulate photocatalyst systems.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(26): e202204948, 2022 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35560974

ABSTRACT

Photocatalytic conversion of CO2 into transportable fuels such as formic acid (HCOOH) under sunlight is an attractive solution to the shortage of energy and carbon resources as well as to the increase in Earth's atmospheric CO2 concentration. The use of abundant elements as the components of a photocatalytic CO2 reduction system is important, and a solid catalyst that is active, recyclable, nontoxic, and inexpensive is strongly demanded. Here, we show that a widespread soil mineral, alpha-iron(III) oxyhydroxide (α-FeOOH; goethite), loaded onto an Al2 O3 support, functions as a recyclable catalyst for a photocatalytic CO2 reduction system under visible light (λ>400 nm) in the presence of a RuII photosensitizer and an electron donor. This system gave HCOOH as the main product with 80-90 % selectivity and an apparent quantum yield of 4.3 % at 460 nm, as confirmed by isotope tracer experiments with 13 CO2 . The present work shows that the use of a proper support material is another method of catalyst activation toward the selective reduction of CO2 .

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(18): 8412-8420, 2020 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32282192

ABSTRACT

Sensitization of a wide-gap oxide semiconductor with a visible-light-absorbing dye has been studied for decades as a means of producing H2 from water. However, efficient overall water splitting using a dye-sensitized oxide photocatalyst has remained an unmet challenge. Here we demonstrate visible-light-driven overall water splitting into H2 and O2 using HCa2Nb3O10 nanosheets sensitized by a Ru(II) tris-diimine type photosensitizer, in combination with a WO3-based water oxidation photocatalyst and a triiodide/iodide redox couple. With the use of Pt-intercalated HCa2Nb3O10 nanosheets further modified with amorphous Al2O3 clusters as the H2 evolution component, the dye-based turnover number and frequency for H2 evolution reached 4580 and 1960 h-1, respectively. The apparent quantum yield for overall water splitting using 420 nm light was 2.4%, by far the highest among dye-sensitized overall water splitting systems reported to date. The present work clearly shows that a carefully designed dye/oxide hybrid has great potential for photocatalytic H2 production, and represents a significant leap forward in the development of solar-driven water splitting systems.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(43): 17158-17165, 2019 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31588742

ABSTRACT

Mixed-anion compounds (e.g., oxynitrides and oxysulfides) are potential candidates as photoanodes for visible-light water oxidation, but most of them suffer from oxidative degradation by photogenerated holes, leading to low stability. Here we show an exceptional example of a stable, mixed-anion water-oxidation photoanode that consists of an oxyfluoride, Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2, having a band gap of ca. 2.4 eV. Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 particles, which were coated on a transparent conductive glass (FTO) support and were subject to postdeposition of a TiO2 overlayer, generated an anodic photocurrent upon band gap photoexcitation of Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 (λ <520 nm) with a rather negative photocurrent onset potential of ca. -0.6 V vs NHE, which was independent of the pH of the electrolyte solution. Stable photoanodic current was observed even without loading a water oxidation promoter such as CoOx. Nevertheless, loading CoOx onto the TiO2/Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2/FTO electrode further improved the anodic photoresponse by a factor of 2-3. Under AM1.5G simulated sunlight (100 mW cm-2), stable water oxidation to form O2 was achieved using the optimized Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 photoanode in the presence of an applied potential smaller than 1.23 V, giving a Faradaic efficiency of 93% and almost no sign of deactivation during 4 h of operation. This study presents the first example of photoelectrochemical water splitting driven by visible-light excitation of an oxyfluoride that stably works, even without a water oxidation promoter, which is distinct from ordinary mixed-anion photoanodes that usually require a water oxidation promoter.

7.
Dalton Trans ; 48(42): 15778-15781, 2019 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31617522

ABSTRACT

Although Zn-based binary semiconductors such as ZnO and ZnS are photocatalytically unstable toward water oxidation, we found that mixed-anionization successfully addressed this issue. This report shows that an oxysulfide SrZn2S2O functions as a photocatalyst to reduce and oxidize water under band-gap irradiation without noticeable decomposition of the material.

8.
Dalton Trans ; 48(32): 12272-12278, 2019 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31339138

ABSTRACT

An extremely large displacement of the indium site in In-S6 octahedra in LnOInS2 (Ln = La, Ce, and Pr) was found in synchrotron X-ray diffraction. LaOInS2 with off-center indium in In-S6 octahedra exhibited a wider optical band gap than CeOInS2 and PrOInS2 with on-center indium. Therefore, the electronic structure of LnOInS2 is governed by the indium site with an extremely large displacement. All LnOInS2 produced H2 gas under visible light irradiation in the presence of sacrificial electron donors.

9.
Chemistry ; 24(69): 18204-18219, 2018 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29570871

ABSTRACT

Water splitting using a semiconductor photocatalyst with sunlight has long been viewed as a potential means of large-scale H2 production from renewable resources. Different from anatase TiO2 , rutile enables preferential water oxidation, which is useful for the construction of a Z-scheme water-splitting system. The combination of rutile TiO2 with a suitable H2 -evolution photocatalyst such as a Pt-loaded BaZrO3 -BaTaO2 N solid solution enables solar-driven water splitting into H2 and O2 . While rutile TiO2 is a wide-gap semiconductor with a bandgap of 3.0 eV, co-doping of rutile TiO2 with certain metal ions and/or nitrogen produces visible-light-driven photocatalysts, which are also useful as a component for water oxidation in visible-light-driven Z-scheme water splitting. The key to achieving highly efficient water oxidation is to maintain a charge balance of dopants in the rutile, because single doping typically produces trap states that capture photogenerated electrons and/or holes. Here we provide a concise summary of rutile TiO2 -based photocatalysts for water-splitting systems.

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