Enhancing photocatalytic CO2 conversion through oxygen-vacancy-mediated topological phase transition

Weak adsorption of gas reactants and strong binding of intermediates present a significant challenge for most transition metal oxides, particularly in the realm of CO2 photoreduction. Herein, we demonstrate that the adsorption can be fine-tuned by phase engineering of oxide catalysts. An oxygen vaca...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yang, Sudong, Guo, Xu, Li, Xiaoning, Wu, Tianze, Zou, Longhua, He, Zhiying, Xu, Qing, Zheng, Junjie, Chen, Lin, Wang, Qingyuan, Xu, Jason Zhichuan
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174663
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Weak adsorption of gas reactants and strong binding of intermediates present a significant challenge for most transition metal oxides, particularly in the realm of CO2 photoreduction. Herein, we demonstrate that the adsorption can be fine-tuned by phase engineering of oxide catalysts. An oxygen vacancy mediated topological phase transition in Ni-Co oxide nanowires, supported on a hierarchical graphene aerogel (GA), is observed from a spinel phase to a rock-salt phase. Such in situ phase transition empowers the Ni-Co oxide catalyst with a strong internal electric field and the attainment of abundant oxygen vacancies. Among a series of catalysts, the in situ transformed spinel/rock-salt heterojunction supported on GA stands out for an exceptional photocatalytic CO2 reduction activity and selectivity, yielding an impressive CO production rate of 12.5 mmol g−1 h−1 and high selectivity of 96.5 %. This remarkable performance is a result of the robust interfacial coupling between two topological phases that optimizes the electronic structures through directional charge transfer across interfaces. The phase transition process induces more Co2+ in octahedral site, which can effectively enhance the Co-O covalency. This synergistic effect balances the surface activation of CO2 molecules and desorption of reaction intermediates, thereby lowering the energetic barrier of the rate-limiting step.