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Tailored self-assembled photocatalytic nanofibres for visible-light-driven hydrogen production.

Jia TianYifan ZhangLili DuYunxiang HeXu-Hui JinSamuel PearceJean-Charles EloiRobert L HarnimanDominic AlibhaiRuquan YeDavid Lee PhillipsIan Manners
Published in: Nature chemistry (2020)
The creation of efficient artificial systems that mimic natural photosynthesis represents a key current challenge. Here, we describe a high-performance recyclable photocatalytic core-shell nanofibre system that integrates a cobalt catalyst and a photosensitizer in close proximity for hydrogen production from water using visible light. The composition, microstructure and dimensions-and thereby the catalytic activity-of the nanofibres were controlled through living crystallization-driven self-assembly. In this seeded growth strategy, block copolymers with crystallizable core-forming blocks and functional coronal segments were coassembled into low-dispersity, one-dimensional architectures. Under optimized conditions, the nanofibres promote the photocatalytic production of hydrogen from water with an overall quantum yield for solar energy conversion to hydrogen gas of ~4.0% (with a turnover number of >7,000 over 5 h, a frequency of >1,400 h-1 and a H2 production rate of >0.327 μmol h-1 with 1.34 μg of catalytic polymer (that is, >244,300 μmol h-1 g-1 of catalytic polymer)).
Keyphrases
  • visible light
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