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In-Situ Grafting of Single-Atomic Titanium-Nitrogen Moiety onto Carbon Nanostructures for Efficient Photovoltaic Devices.

Cuncun XinSuxia LiangJinwen HuJingya GuoXusheng ChengWenzhe ShangJiazhen WeiSonglin ZhangWei LiuChao ZhuJungang HouYantao Shi
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Early transition metals offer promising orthogonal reactivity to catalytic processes promoted by late transition metals. Nevertheless, exploiting variable single-atomic configurations as reactive centers is hitherto not well documented owing to their oxophilic nature. Herein we report an in - situ grafting strategy that employs nitrogenated holey carbon nitrides as a scaffold and invokes the reasonably good match of temperature-dependent pyrolysis to stabilize an atomic titanium-nitrogen (Ti 1 N 2 OH) moiety onto the hierarchical porous carbon support (Ti 1 /NC-SAC). The Ti 1 /NC-SAC as the cathode in dye-sensitized solar cells assembly exhibited superior electrocatalytic activity toward the triiodine reduction reaction, comparable to the conventional Pt cathode. DFT studies theoretically identified that the intrinsic robust triiodine reduction activity is essentially governed by the unique edge-hosted Ti sites, from both aspects, near-optimal adsorption of I intermediate and electron-donating ability. This work sheds light on the rational design of Ti-based SACs and their applications in photovoltaic fields.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • human health
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • electron microscopy
  • metal organic framework
  • climate change
  • aqueous solution
  • health risk assessment
  • crystal structure
  • molecular dynamics