Atmosphere engineering of metal-free Te/C3N4 p-n heterojunction for nearly 100% photocatalytic converting CO2 to CO

Carbon nitride (CN)-based heterojunction photocatalysts hold promise for efficient carbon dioxide (CO2) reduction. However, suboptimal production yields and limited selectivity in CO2 conversion pose significant barriers to achieving efficient CO2 conversion. Here, we present the construction of a p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liao, Huange, Huang, Kai, Hou, Weidong, Guo, Huazhang, Lian, Cheng, Zhang, Jiye, Liu, Zheng, Wang, Liang
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182082
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Carbon nitride (CN)-based heterojunction photocatalysts hold promise for efficient carbon dioxide (CO2) reduction. However, suboptimal production yields and limited selectivity in CO2 conversion pose significant barriers to achieving efficient CO2 conversion. Here, we present the construction of a p-n heterojunction between ultrasmall Te NPs and CN nanosheet using a novel tandem hydrothermal-calcination synthesis strategy. Through ammonia-assisted calcination, ultrasmall Te NPs are grown in-situ on the CN nanosheets’ surface, resulting in the generation of a robust p-n heterojunction. The synthesized heterojunction exhibits increased specific surface area, reinforced visible light absorption, intensive CO2 adsorption capacity, and efficient charge transfer. The optimum Te/CN-NH3 demonstrates superior photocatalytic CO2 reduction activity and durability, with nearly 100 ​% selectivity for CO and a yield as high as 92.0 ​μmol ​g−1 ​h−1, a fourfold increase compared to pure CN. Experimental and theoretical calculations unravel that the strong built-in electric field of the Te/CN-NH3 p-n heterojunction accelerates the migration of photogenerated electrons from Te NPs to the N site on CN nanosheets, thereby promoting CO2 reduction. This study provides a promising material design approach for the construction of high-performance p-n heterojunction photocatalysts.