Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution

A Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodot‐modified graphitic carbon nitride (CN) photocatalyst (CNV‐P) was fabricated for the first time using a chemical reduction method, during which nitrogen vacancies in g‐C3N4 assist to stabilize Pt2+ species. It is elucidated that the coexistence of metallic Pt0 and Pt2+ speci...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xing, Weinan, Tu, Wenguang, Ou, Man, Wu, Shuyang, Yin, Shengming, Wang, Haojing, Chen, Gang, Xu, Rong
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141767
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-141767
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1417672020-06-10T08:43:25Z Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution Xing, Weinan Tu, Wenguang Ou, Man Wu, Shuyang Yin, Shengming Wang, Haojing Chen, Gang Xu, Rong School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Engineering::Chemical engineering Graphitic Carbon Nitride Hydrogen Evolution A Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodot‐modified graphitic carbon nitride (CN) photocatalyst (CNV‐P) was fabricated for the first time using a chemical reduction method, during which nitrogen vacancies in g‐C3N4 assist to stabilize Pt2+ species. It is elucidated that the coexistence of metallic Pt0 and Pt2+ species in the Pt nanodots loaded on g‐C3N4 results in superior photocatalytic H2 evolution performance with very low Pt loadings. The turnover frequencies (TOFs) are 265.91 and 116.38 h−1 for CNV‐P‐0.1 (0.1 wt % Pt) and CNV‐P‐0.5 (0.5 wt % Pt), respectively, which are much higher than for other g‐C3N4‐based photocatalysts with Pt co‐catalyst reported previously. The excellent photocatalytic H2 evolution performance is a result of i) metallic Pt0 facilitating the electron transport and separation and Pt2+ species preventing the undesirable H2 backward reaction, ii) the strong interfacial contact between Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots and nitrogen vacancies of CNV facilitating the interfacial electron transfer, and iii) the highly dispersed Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots exposing more active sites for photocatalytic H2 evolution. Our findings are useful for the design of highly active semiconductor‐based photocatalysts with extremely low precious metal content to reduce the catalyst cost while achieving good activity. MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) 2020-06-10T08:43:25Z 2020-06-10T08:43:25Z 2018 Journal Article Xing, W., Tu, W., Ou, M., Wu, S., Yin, S., Wang, H., . . . Xu, R. (2019). Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution. ChemSusChem, 12(9), 2029-2034. doi:10.1002/cssc.201801431 1864-5631 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141767 10.1002/cssc.201801431 30088698 2-s2.0-85052700856 9 12 2029 2034 en ChemSusChem © 2019 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Chemical engineering
Graphitic Carbon Nitride
Hydrogen Evolution
spellingShingle Engineering::Chemical engineering
Graphitic Carbon Nitride
Hydrogen Evolution
Xing, Weinan
Tu, Wenguang
Ou, Man
Wu, Shuyang
Yin, Shengming
Wang, Haojing
Chen, Gang
Xu, Rong
Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
description A Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodot‐modified graphitic carbon nitride (CN) photocatalyst (CNV‐P) was fabricated for the first time using a chemical reduction method, during which nitrogen vacancies in g‐C3N4 assist to stabilize Pt2+ species. It is elucidated that the coexistence of metallic Pt0 and Pt2+ species in the Pt nanodots loaded on g‐C3N4 results in superior photocatalytic H2 evolution performance with very low Pt loadings. The turnover frequencies (TOFs) are 265.91 and 116.38 h−1 for CNV‐P‐0.1 (0.1 wt % Pt) and CNV‐P‐0.5 (0.5 wt % Pt), respectively, which are much higher than for other g‐C3N4‐based photocatalysts with Pt co‐catalyst reported previously. The excellent photocatalytic H2 evolution performance is a result of i) metallic Pt0 facilitating the electron transport and separation and Pt2+ species preventing the undesirable H2 backward reaction, ii) the strong interfacial contact between Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots and nitrogen vacancies of CNV facilitating the interfacial electron transfer, and iii) the highly dispersed Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots exposing more active sites for photocatalytic H2 evolution. Our findings are useful for the design of highly active semiconductor‐based photocatalysts with extremely low precious metal content to reduce the catalyst cost while achieving good activity.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Xing, Weinan
Tu, Wenguang
Ou, Man
Wu, Shuyang
Yin, Shengming
Wang, Haojing
Chen, Gang
Xu, Rong
format Article
author Xing, Weinan
Tu, Wenguang
Ou, Man
Wu, Shuyang
Yin, Shengming
Wang, Haojing
Chen, Gang
Xu, Rong
author_sort Xing, Weinan
title Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
title_short Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
title_full Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
title_fullStr Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
title_full_unstemmed Anchoring active Pt2+/Pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-C3N4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic H2 evolution
title_sort anchoring active pt2+/pt0 hybrid nanodots on g-c3n4 nitrogen vacancies for photocatalytic h2 evolution
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141767
_version_ 1681057962368434176