4.8 Article

Visible-light overall water splitting on g-C3N4 decorated by subnanometer oxide clusters

Journal

MATERIALS TODAY PHYSICS
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mtphys.2020.100312

Keywords

Bifunctional photocatalyst; Holey carbon monolayer; Subnanometer cluster; Overall water splitting; p-block metal oxide

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11974068, 91961204]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [DUT20-LAB110]

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The study demonstrates that loading subnanometer p-block metal oxide clusters on 2D porous carbon materials can improve photocatalytic efficiency and provide an effective pathway for manipulating photocatalytic behavior. The research reveals the basic rules for optimizing the relaxation pathway and lifetime of excited carriers, as well as creating bifunctional reaction centers by controlling the concentration and size of oxide clusters.
Two-dimensional (2D) nitrogenated holey carbon materials are promising non-precious photocatalysts for clean energy production. However, their efficiency is limited by the fast electron-hole recombination and lack of active sites. To overcome these drawbacks, here for the first time, we show that loading subnanometer p-block metal oxide clusters on 2D porous carbon-based semiconductors can trigger peculiar synergistic effect and offer an effective route for manipulating the photocatalytic behavior at atomic precision. As a prototype system, g-C3N4 monolayer decorated by MgO tubular clusters for overall water splitting is explored by time-dependent ab initio nonadiabatic molecular dynamic simulations. Such novel (MgO)n/g-C3N4 heterostructures possess excellent stability in aqueous solution, high activity for water splitting, and superior photocarrier transport properties. The basic rules for optimally steering the relaxation pathway and lifetime of excited carriers and creating bifunctional reaction centers by controlling the concentration and size of oxide clusters are thoroughly unveiled. Our work provides a new strategy to modify 2D porous carbon materials for practical solar energy conversion and shines light on utilizing subnanometer p-block oxide clusters with earth-abundant and low-cost elements for precisely dictating the performance of hybrid photocatalysts. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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