Modulating Photoinduced Electron Transfer between Photosensitive MOF and Co(II) Proton Reduction Sites for Boosting Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production.
Jianguo BaiJun WangHao ZhengXiaoli ZhaoPengyan WuLi PeiJian WangPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Photocatalytic hydrogen production via water splitting is the subject of intense research. Photoinduced electron transfer (PET) between a photosensitizer (PS) and a proton reduction catalyst is a prerequisite step and crucial to affecting hydrogen production efficiency. Herein, three photoactive metal-organic framework (MOF) systems having two different PET processes where PS and Co(II) centers are either covalently bonded or coexisting to drive photocatalytic H 2 production are built. Compared to these two intramolecular PET systems including Co II -Zn-PDTP prepared from the post-synthetic metalation toward uncoordinated pyridine N sites of Zn-PDTP and sole cobalt-based MOF Co-PDTP, the Co II (bpy) 3 @Zn-PDTP system impregnated by molecular cocatalyst possessing intermolecular PET process achieves the highest H 2 evolution rate of 116.8 mmol g -1 h -1 over a period of 10 h, about 7.5 and 9.3 times compared to Co II -Zn-PDTP and Co-PDTP in visible-light-driven H 2 evolution, respectively. Further studies reveal that the enhanced photoactivity in Co II (bpy) 3 @Zn-PDTP can be ascribed to the high charge-separation efficiency of Zn-PDTP and the synergistic intermolecular interaction between Zn-PDTP and cobalt complexes. The present work demonstrates that the rational design of PET process between MOFs and catalytic metal sites can be a viable strategy for the development of highly efficient photocatalysts with enhanced photocatalytic activities.