Solvent-in-Gas System for Promoted Photocatalytic Ammonia Synthesis on Porous Framework Materials.
Sisi LiuMengfan WangHaoqing JiLifang ZhangJiajie NiNajun LiTao QianChenglin YanJianmei LuPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Photocatalytic nitrogen reduction reaction (PNRR) is emerging as a sustainable ammonia synthesis approach to meet global carbon neutrality. Porous framework materials with well-designed structures have great opportunities in PNRR; however, they suffer from unsatisfactory activity in the conventional gas-in-solvent system, owing to the hindrance of nitrogen utilization and strong competing hydrogen evolution caused by overwhelming solvent. In this study, we combined porous framework materials with a novel "solvent-in-gas" system, which can bring their superiority into full play. This system enables photocatalysts to directly operate in a gas-dominated environment with a limited proton source uniformly suspended in it, achieving the accumulation of high-concentrated nitrogen within porous framework while efficiently restricting the solvent-photocatalyst contact. Over eight-fold increase in ammonia production rate (1820.7 μmol g -1 h -1 ) compared with the conventional gas-in-solvent system, and an apparent quantum efficiency as high as ∼0.5% at 400 nm were achieved. This system-level strategy further finds applicability in photocatalytic CO 2 reduction, featuring it as a staple for photosynthetic methodology. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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