4.8 Article

Construction of MnO2/Monolayer g-C3N4 with Mn vacancies for Z-scheme overall water splitting

Journal

APPLIED CATALYSIS B-ENVIRONMENTAL
Volume 241, Issue -, Pages 452-460

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2018.08.073

Keywords

Defect-Engineering; Monolayer g-C3N4; MnO2; Defective Mn3+ active sites; Overall water splitting

Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [21476097, 21776118]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2017M620193]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20161363]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions
  5. high performance computing platform of Jiangsu University

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Defect-Engineering is a promising way to introduce metal cation vacancies into target materials, thereby resulting in excellent performance for photocatalytic or electrocatalytic water splitting. Inspired by this, we propose an efficient Z-scheme system comprised of 2D MnO2/Monolayer g-C3N4 with defective Mn3+ active sites to realize overall water splitting. These defective Mn3+ active sites might boost H2O adsorption and optimize the interfacial charge separation/transfer in the photocatalytic process by introducing the Mn3+/Mn4+ redox couple. As a result, the composite displays an excellent and stable H-2 and O-2 evolution rates of 60.6 and 28.9 mu mol g(-1) h(-1), respectively. Meanwhile, the H-2 evolution rate is up to 28.0 mmol g(-1) h(-1) with apparent quantum efficiency of 23.33% at 420 nm in the H-2 evolution half reaction. This study provides a new opportunity for constructing a Z-scheme overall water splitting system by exploiting the redox reactions of other metal cation vacancies.

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