Thiophene-Based Conjugated Acetylenic Polymers with Dual Active Sites for Efficient Co-Catalyst-Free Photoelectrochemical Water Reduction in Alkaline Medium.
Mino BorrelliChristine Joy QuerebilloDominik L PastoetterTao WangAlberto MilaniCarlo CasariHoang Khoa LyFan HeYang HouChristof NeumannAndrey TurchaninHanjun SunInez M WeidingerXinliang FengPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Although being attractive materials for photoelectrochemical hydrogen evolution reaction (PEC HER) under neutral or acidic conditions, conjugated polymers still show poor PEC HER performance in alkaline medium due to the lack of water dissociation sites. Herein, we demonstrate that tailoring the polymer skeleton from poly(diethynylthieno[3,2-b]thiophene) (pDET) to poly(2,6-diethynylbenzo[1,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene (pBDT) and poly(diethynyldithieno[3,2-b:2',3'-d]thiophene) (pDTT) in conjugated acetylenic polymers (CAPs) introduces highly efficient active sites for water dissociation. As a result, pDTT and pBDT, grown on Cu substrate, demonstrate benchmark photocurrent densities of 170 μA cm-2 and 120 μA cm-2 (at 0.3 V vs. RHE; pH 13), which are 4.2 and 3 times higher than that of pDET, respectively. Moreover, by combining DFT calculations and electrochemical operando resonance Raman spectroscopy, we propose that the electron-enriched Cβ of the outer thiophene rings of pDTT are the water dissociation active sites, while the -C≡C- bonds function as the active sites for hydrogen evolution.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- electron transfer
- raman spectroscopy
- photodynamic therapy
- ionic liquid
- density functional theory
- quantum dots
- label free
- gold nanoparticles
- molecular dynamics
- sensitive detection
- molecular dynamics simulations
- mass spectrometry
- molecular docking
- room temperature
- anaerobic digestion
- high resolution
- metal organic framework
- amino acid