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Room-Temperature Synthesis of Single Iron Site by Electrofiltration for Photoreduction of CO2 into Tunable Syngas.

Zhiyuan WangJia YangJunbo CaoWenxing ChenGang WangFan LiaoXiao ZhouFangyao ZhouRuilong LiZhen-Qiang YuGuoqing ZhangXuezhi DuanYuen Wu
Published in: ACS nano (2020)
Developing a convenient and effective method to prepare single-atom catalysts at mild synthetic conditions remains a challenging task. Herein, a voltage-gauged electrofiltration method was demonstrated to synthesize single-atom site catalysts at room temperature. Under regulation of the graphene oxide membrane, a bulk Fe plate was directly converted into Fe single atoms, and the diffusion rate of Fe ions was greatly reduced, resulting in an ultralow concentration of Fe2+ around the working electrode, which successfully prevented the growing of nuclei and aggregating of metal atoms. Monatomic Fe atoms are homogeneously anchored on the as-prepared nitrogen-doped carbon. Owing to the fast photoelectron injection from photosensitizers to atomically dispersed Fe sites through the highly conductive supported N-C, the Fe-SAs/N-C exhibits an outstanding photocatalytic activity toward CO2 aqueous reduction into syngas with a tunable CO/H2 ratio under visible light irradiation. The gas evolution rates for CO and H2 are 4500 and 4950 μmol g-1 h-1, respectively, and the tunable CO/H2 ratio is from 0.3 to 8.8. This article presents an efficient strategy to develop the single-atom site catalysts and bridges the gap between heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysts toward photocatalytic CO2 aqueous reduction into syngas.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • room temperature
  • metal organic framework
  • highly efficient
  • ionic liquid
  • aqueous solution
  • molecular dynamics
  • radiation therapy
  • radiation induced
  • water soluble