4.8 Article

Phenyl-triazine oligomers for light-driven hydrogen evolution

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages 3345-3353

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5ee02574e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [LO1801/1-1, SE1417/5-1]
  2. cluster of excellence Nanosystems Initiative Munich'' (NIM)
  3. Center for NanoScience (CeNS)

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The design of stable, yet highly tunable organic photocatalysts which orchestrate multi-step electron transfer reactions is at the heart of the newly emerging field of polymer photocatalysis. Covalent triazine frameworks such as the archetypal CTF-1 have been theorized to constitute a new class of photocatalytically active polymers for light-driven water splitting. Here, we revisit the ionothermal synthesis of CTF-1 by trimerization of 1,4-dicyanobenzene catalyzed by the Lewis acid zinc chloride and demonstrate that the microporous black polymer CTF-1 is essentially inactive for hydrogen evolution. Instead, highly photoactive phenyl-triazine oligomers (PTOs) with higher crystallinity as compared to CTF-1 are obtained by lowering the reaction temperature to 300 degrees C and prolonging the reaction time to 4150 hours. The low reaction temperature of the PTOs largely prevents incipient carbonization and thus results in a carbon-to-nitrogen weight ratio close to the theoretical value of 3.43. The oligomers were characterized by MALDI-TOF and quantitative solid-state NMR spectroscopy, revealing variations in size, connectivity and thus nitrile-to-triazine ratios depending on the initial precursor dilution. The most active PTO samples efficiently and stably reduce water to hydrogen with an average rate of 1076 (+/- 278) mmol h(-1) g(-1) under simulated sunlight illumination, which is competitive with the best carbon nitride-based and purely organic photocatalysts. The photocatalytic activity of the PTOs is found to sensitively depend on the polymerization degree, thus suggesting a prominent role of the unreacted nitrile moieties in the photocatalytic process. Notably, PTOs even show moderate hydrogen production without the addition of any co-catalyst.

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