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Construction of Ultrathin S-Scheme Heterojunctions of Single Ni Atom Immobilized Ti-MOF and BiVO 4 for CO 2 Photoconversion of nearly 100% to CO by Pure Water.

Lina ZhaoJi BianXianfa ZhangLinlu BaiLinyao XuYang QuZhijun LiYuxin LiLiqiang Jing
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
To rationally design single-atom metal-organic framework (MOF)-involving photocatalysts remains an ongoing challenge for efficient CO 2 conversion. Here, cuppy microstructures, consisting of a Ti(IV)-oxo node and three linked carboxylic moieties, in the single-coordination-layer Ti 2 (H 2 dobdc) 3 MOF (NTU-9) are exploited to immobilize abundant single Ni(II) sites (Ni@MOF). The coupling of Ni@MOF with BiVO 4 (BVO) nanosheets by H-bonding-induced assembly process obtains wide-spectrum 2D heterojunctions. The optimal heterojunction exhibits competitive performance and enables around 66-fold CO 2 conversion of that for BVO nanoparticles by pure water, with nearly 100% CO selectivity. The exceptional photoactivity is attributed to favorable S-scheme charge transfer from BVO to MOF then to single Ni(II) sites. Noteworthily, single Ni(II) sites anchored by the Ti(IV)-oxo node and vicinal carboxylic moieties serving as a unique local microenvironment (LME) are found to synergistically catalyze CO 2 conversion. Specifically, the hydroxyl groups of carboxylic moieties can form H-bonds with CO 2 to promote its adsorption on single Ni(II) sites, and also can provide accessible protons to facilitate H-assisted CO 2 reduction. Moreover, the CO desorption and subsequent CO 2 adsorption on single Ni(II) sites with LME is proved to be thermodynamically favored, and hence dominates the high CO selectivity. This work highlights the significance of modulating the LME of single atoms to rationally design photocatalysts for realizing carbon neutralization.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • visible light
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  • transition metal
  • molecular dynamics
  • signaling pathway
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