4.8 Article

Partially Oxidized SnS2 Atomic Layers Achieving Efficient Visible-Light-Driven CO2 Reduction

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 139, Issue 49, Pages 18044-18051

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b10287

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFA0303500, 2017YFA0207301]
  2. National Nature Science Foundation [21422107, U1632147, 21331005, U1532265, 11621063]
  3. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of CAS [CX2340000100]
  4. CAS [QYZDY-SSW-SLH011]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [WK2340000063, WK2340000073]
  6. center of Scientific Research Grant of Hefei Science Center of CAS [2016HSC-IU002]

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Unraveling the role of surface oxide on affecting its native metal disulfide's CO2 photoreduction remains a grand challenge. Herein, we initially construct metal disulfide atomic layers and hence deliberately create oxidized domains on their surfaces. As an example, SnS2 atomic layers with different oxidation degrees are successfully synthesized. In situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy spectra disclose the COOH* radical is the main intermediate, whereas density functional-theory calculations reveal the COOH* formation is the rate-limiting step. The locally oxidized domains could serve as the highly catalytically active sites, which not only benefit for charge-carrier separation kinetics, verified by surface photo voltage spectra, but also result in electron localization on Sn atoms near the O atoms, thus lowering the activation energy barrier through stabilizing the COOH* intermediates. As a result, the mildly oxidized SnS2 atomic layers exhibit the monoxide formation rate of 12.28 mu mol g(-1) h(-1), roughly 2.3 and 2.6 times higher than those of the poorly oxidized SnS2 atomic layers and the SnS2 atomic layers under visible-light illumination. This work uncovers atomic-level insights into the correlation between oxidized sulfides and CO2 reduction property, paving a new way for obtaining high-efficiency CO2 photoreduction performances.

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