Coupling Electron Transfer and Redox Site in Boranil Covalent Organic Framework Toward Boosting Photocatalytic Water Oxidation.
Rahul Anil BorseYan-Xi TanJing LinEnbo ZhouYangdan HuiDa-Qiang YuanYaobing WangPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
The efficient polymeric semiconducting photocatalyst for solar-driven sluggish kinetics with multielectron transfer oxygen evolution has spurred scientific interest. However, existing photocatalysts limited by π-conjugations, visible-light harvest, and charge transfer often compromise the O 2 production rate. Herein, we introduced an alternative strategy involving a boranil functionalized-based fully π-conjugated ordered donor and acceptor (D-A) covalent organic frameworks (Ni-TAPP-COF-BF 2 ) photocatalyst. The co-catalyst-free Ni-TAPP-COF-BF 2 exhibits an excellent ~11-fold photocatalytic water oxidation rate, reaching 1404 μmol g -1 h -1 under visible light irradiation compared to pristine Ni-TAPP-COF (123 μmol g -1 h -1 ) alone and surpasses to reported organic frameworks counterpart. Both experimental and theoretical results demonstrate that the push/pull mechanism (metalloporphyrin/BF 2 ) is responsible for the appropriate light-harvesting properties and extending π-conjugation through chelating BF 2 moieties. This strategy benefits in narrowing band structure, improving photo-induced charge separation, and prolonged charge recombination. Further, the lower spin magnetic moment of M-TAPP-COF-BF 2 and the closer d-band center of metal sites toward the Fermi level lead to a lower energy barrier for *O intermediate. Reveal the potential of the functionalization strategy and opens up an alternative approach for engineering future photocatalysts in energy conversion applications.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- electron transfer
- transition metal
- solar cells
- water soluble
- room temperature
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- dna damage
- drug delivery
- photodynamic therapy
- energy transfer
- single cell
- dna repair
- single molecule
- quantum dots
- climate change
- radiation therapy
- oxidative stress
- radiation induced
- drug induced
- nitric oxide
- ionic liquid
- simultaneous determination