4.8 Article

Bimetal-organic layer-derived ultrathin lateral heterojunction with continuous semi-coherent interfaces for boosting photocatalytic CO2 reduction

Journal

APPLIED CATALYSIS B-ENVIRONMENTAL
Volume 331, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.122689

Keywords

Metal-organic layer; Lateral heterojunction; Semi-coherent interface; CO2 reduction; Photocatalysis

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In this study, a NiO-Co3O4 ultrathin lateral heterojunction was developed using NiCo-based bimetal-organic layers as precursors. The atomic-resolution images revealed a unique continuous semi-coherent interface between NiO and Co3O4, which effectively facilitated electron transfer and raised the d-band center of Co3O4 towards the Fermi level. As a result, the *COOH intermediate could strongly bind on cobalt reactive centers, leading to a remarkable gas yield of 22.67 mmol h-1 in photocatalytic CO2 reduction over NiO-Co3O4. This work highlights the crucial roles of interface engineering in regulating carrier kinetics and surface reactions.
Current heterojunction photocatalysts suffer from sluggish charge transfer due to the discontinuous interfaces at an atomic level. Herein, we report a NiO-Co3O4 ultrathin lateral heterojunction using NiCo-based bimet-al-organic layers as precursors. The atomic-resolution images display a unique continuous semi-coherent interface between NiO and Co3O4. The experimental results confirm that the continuous semi-coherent in-terfaces effectively expedite the electron transfer from NiO to Co3O4. Concomitantly, the electron transfer raises d-band center of Co3O4 in NiO-Co3O4 toward Fermi level, as revealed by the density functional theory calcu-lations. As a result, the *COOH intermediate can be strongly bound on cobalt reactive centers. The successful modulation of charge transfer and intermediate binding by continuous semi-coherent interfaces leads to a remarkable gas yield of 22.67 mmol h-1 from photocatalytic CO2 reduction over NiO-Co3O4. This work high-lights the crucial roles of interface engineering in regulating carrier kinetics and surface reactions.

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