Xiaoxue Lin, Xiaoying Peng, Suqin Wu, Chen Ma, Dou Chen, Quanming Peng, Kai Yang, Fan Liu, Shungao Yin, Guiming Peng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The unsatisfied visible light harvesting, slow charge separation, and limited practical surface area of carbon nitride (CN) constrain its performance in photocatalytic water splitting and environmental remediation. Herein, the thermal vapor‐assisted π‐conjugation modification of CN by grafting with p‐aminophenoxy groups was developed to tune the photophysical properties of CN to enhance its photocatalytic activity. Besides extending the light absorption, the surface modification constructed a nanojunction across the depth direction, which leads to facilitated charge separation and transfer. In addition, the thermal vapor modification process thermally etches and trims the pristine CN to be highly holey structure, resulting to >10 times increase in specific surface area. Photocatalysis results showed that the obtained modified CN yielded hydrogen from photocatalytic water splitting at a rate of 7.82 mmol/g/h, over 7‐folds as that of pristine CN, with quantum yield of 3.28% at 400 nm. The π‐conjugation modified CN also demonstrated enhanced photocatalytic environmental remediation application, exemplified by much faster photodegradation of tetracycline hydrochloride. This work provides the thermal vapor surface chemical modification of CN as a promising integrated pathway of multiple favorable photophysical properties towards efficient photocatalysis application.
期刊介绍:
With an impact factor of 4.495 (2018), ChemCatChem is one of the premier journals in the field of catalysis. The journal provides primary research papers and critical secondary information on heterogeneous, homogeneous and bio- and nanocatalysis. The journal is well placed to strengthen cross-communication within between these communities. Its authors and readers come from academia, the chemical industry, and government laboratories across the world. It is published on behalf of Chemistry Europe, an association of 16 European chemical societies, and is supported by the German Catalysis Society.