Precise Defect Engineering on Graphitic Carbon Nitrides for Boosted Solar H 2 Production.
Shaoqi HouXiaochun GaoShijian WangXingxing YuJiayan LiaoDawei SuPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Defect engineering has been regarded as an "all-in-one strategy" to alleviate the insufficient solar utilization in g-C 3 N 4 . However, without appropriate modification, the defect benefits will be partly offset due to the formation of deep localized defect states and deteriorated surface states, lowering the photocarrier separation efficiency. To this end, the defective g-C 3 N 4 is designed with both S dopants and N vacancies via a dual-solvent-assisted synthetic approach. The precise defect control is realized by the addition of ethylene glycol (EG) into precursor formation and molten sulfur into the pyrolysis process, which simultaneously induced g-C3N4. with shallow defect states. These shallow defect energy levels can act as a temporary electron reservoir, which are critical to evoke the migrated electrons from CB with a moderate trapping ability, thus suppressing the bulky photocarrier recombination. Additionally, the optimized surface states of DCN-ES are also demonstrated by the highest electron-trapping resistance (R trapping ) of 9.56 × 10 3 Ω cm 2 and the slowest decay kinetics of surface carriers (0.057 s -1 ), which guaranteed the smooth surface charge transfer rather than being the recombination sites. As a result, DCN-ES exhibited a superior H 2 evolution rate of 4219.9 µmol g -1 h -1 , which is 29.1-fold higher than unmodified g-C 3 N 4 .