4.2 Review

High-Pressure Torsion for Highly-Strained and High-Entropy Photocatalysts

Journal

KONA POWDER AND PARTICLE JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

HOSOKAWA POWDER TECHNOL FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.14356/kona.2024003

Keywords

photocatalysis; water splitting; oxygen vacancy; nitrogen vacancy; heterojunctions; high-entropy alloys (HEAs); high-entropy ceramics

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Nowadays, the environmental crisis caused by fossil fuels and CO2 emissions is a widespread concern. Photocatalysis is a promising clean technology for producing hydrogen fuel, converting harmful components, and degrading pollutants. However, the low efficiency of photocatalysis remains a significant drawback. Recent studies have shown that high-pressure torsion (HPT) can effectively improve the activity of conventional photocatalysts and synthesize highly efficient ones by increasing light absorbance, narrowing the bandgap, aligning the band structure, and decreasing electron-hole recombination through introducing lattice strain, vacancies, high-pressure phases, heterojunctions, and high-entropy ceramics. This review discusses the recent findings on improving photocatalyst efficiency through HPT processing and the parameters that contribute to these improvements.
Nowadays, the environmental crisis caused by using fossil fuels and CO2 emissions has become a universal concern in people's life. Photocatalysis is a promising clean technology to produce hydrogen fuel, convert harmful components such as CO2, and degrade pollutants like dyes in water. There are various strategies to improve the efficiency of photocatalysis so that it can be used instead of conventional methods; however, the low efficiency of the process has remained a big drawback. In recent years, high-pressure torsion (HPT), as a severe plastic deformation (SPD) method, has shown extremely high potential as an effective strategy to improve the activity of conventional photocatalysts and synthesize new and highly efficient photocatalysts. This method can successfully improve the activity by increasing the light absorbance, narrowing the bandgap, aligning the band structure, decreasing the electron-hole recombination, and accelerating the electron-hole separation by introducing large lattice strain, oxygen vacancies, nitrogen vacancies, high-pressure phases, heterojunctions, and high-entropy ceramics. This study reviews the recent findings on the improvement of the efficiency of photocatalysts by HPT processing and discusses the parameters that lead to these improvements.

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