4.8 Article

Ultrathin Defective Nanosheet Subunit ZnIn2S4 Hollow Nanoflowers for Efficient Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution

Journal

SMALL STRUCTURES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sstr.202300091

Keywords

hollow nanoflowers; hydrogen evolution; stirring; trisodium citrate; ultrathin nanosheets; ZnIn2S4

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Constructing hierarchical and ultrathin-structured metal sulfides is beneficial for efficient hydrogen evolution catalysts. In this study, ZnIn2S4 hollow nanoflowers composed of ultrathin nanosheets were creatively synthesized through a trisodium citrate-mediated and stirring-assisted solvothermal method. The optimized ZnIn2S4 hollow nanoflowers exhibited a high photocatalytic hydrogen generation rate and can be obtained without the need for a cocatalyst.
Constructing hierarchical and ultrathin-structured metal sulfides is beneficial for achieving high-efficiency hydrogen evolution catalysts. Herein, ZnIn2S4 (ZIS) hollow nanoflowers (HNFs) composed of ultrathin nanosheets are creatively synthesized via a facile trisodium citrate-mediated and stirring-assisted solvothermal method. Experimental results reveal that the synergy effect of ethanol, trisodium citrate, and continuous stirring during solvothermal synthesis process play a significant role in optimizing microstructure as well as physicochemical properties of as-prepared ZIS samples. Importantly, the fabricated ZIS HNFs with the thinnest nanosheets (2.28 nm) manifest the highest average photocatalytic hydrogen generation rate of 301.5 mu mol h(-1), which is 2.3 times higher than that of the pristine ZIS microspheres composed of nanoparticles with Pt as the cocatalyst and triethanolamine (TEOA) as the sacrificial agent and outperforms most reported ZnIn2S4-based materials under similar testing conditions. Moreover, the optimized sample also shows a hydrogen generation rate of 0.53 mu mol h(-1.)in pure water without any cocatalyst. This controllable agitation of the reaction mixture during the hydro/solvothermal synthesis process offers an eco-friendly and scalable approach for tuning the microstructure of nanomaterials with enhanced performance for various applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available