Enhancement of CO Evolution by Modification of Ga2O3 with Rare-Earth Elements for the Photocatalytic Conversion of CO2 by H2O.
Hiroyuki TatsumiKentaro TeramuraZeai HuangZheng WangHiroyuki AsakuraSaburo HosokawaTsunehiro TanakaPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2017)
Modification of the surface of Ga2O3 with rare-earth elements enhanced the evolution of CO as a reduction product in the photocatalytic conversion of CO2 using H2O as an electron donor under UV irradiation in aqueous NaHCO3 as a pH buffer, with the rare-earth species functioning as a CO2 capture and storage material. Isotope experiments using 13CO2 as a substrate clearly revealed that CO was generated from the introduced gaseous CO2. In the presence of the NaHCO3 additive, the rare-earth (RE) species on the Ga2O3 surface are transformed into carbonate hydrates (RE2(CO3)3·nH2O) and/or hydroxycarbonates (RE2(OH)2(3-x)(CO3)x) which are decomposed upon photoirradiation. Consequently, Ag-loaded Yb-modified Ga2O3 exhibits much higher activity (209 μmol h-1 of CO) than the pristine Ag-loaded Ga2O3. The further modification of the surface of the Yb-modified Ga2O3 with Zn afforded a selectivity toward CO evolution of 80%. Thus, we successfully achieved an efficient Ag-loaded Yb- and Zn-modified Ga2O3 photocatalyst with high activity and controllable selectivity, suitable for use in artificial photosynthesis.