4.8 Article

Metal-Free Highly Stable and Crystalline Covalent Organic Nanosheet for Visible-Light-Driven Selective Solar Fuel Production in Aqueous Medium

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 5926-5937

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.2c05203

Keywords

covalent organic framework; covalent organic nanosheet; metal free photocatalysis; CO2 reduction; solar fuel

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Conversion of CO2 into solar fuels via artificial photosynthesis is a promising and sustainable approach. COFs with tunable band gaps can serve as unique photocatalysts for CO2 conversion. In this work, a 2D COF (TTA-Tz) composed of TTA and lytic CO2 reduction is developed for efficient photocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO.
Conversion of CO2 into solar fuels via artificial photosynthesis is one of the most promising and sustainable approaches to mitigate global warming and worldwide energy shortage. Covalent organic tunable porosity, and high thermal and chemical stability in harsh conditions. The tunable band gaps of COFs by suitably introducing chromophoric light-harvesting units make them a unique class of metalfree heterogeneous photocatalysts for the successful conversion of CO2 to solar fuel. In this work, we report a simple, efficient, and low-cost 2D COF (TTA-Tz) composed of 1,3,5-tris-(4-aminophenyl)triazine (TTA) and lytic CO2 reduction. The 2D-layered COF is exfoliated into ultrathin covalent organic nanosheets (CONs), which shows visible-light-driven photoreduction of CO2 to CO (yield = 2.8 mmol g-1, rate = 82 mu mol h-1 g-1, and selectivity >99%) in aqueous medium without an external sacrificial electron donor. Interestingly, for a mixed solvent system, the CO evolution rate (163 mu mol g-1 h-1) is found double than the aqueous medium case with 99% selectivity. By introducing both BNAH and TEA as sacrificial electron donors, the significant amount of CH4 (499 mu mol g-1) is produced and the rate of CO evolution (310 mu mol g-1 h-1) is further enhanced. The mechanistic insight of CO2 reduction is studied by DFT-based theoretical calculation, which is further supported by in situ diffuse reflectance spectroscopy study.

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