Atmosphere Engineering of Metal-Free Te/C₃N₄ p-n Heterojunction for Nearly 100% Photocatalytic Conversion of CO₂ to CO

Published 20 November, 2024

Solar-driven carbon dioxide (CO₂) reduction has emerged as a key approach for transforming CO2 into valuable chemicals and fuels, potentially addressing global environmental and climate challenges. Among the various photocatalysts investigated for this purpose, graphitic carbon nitride (CN) has gained attention as a metal-free n-type organic semiconductor. However, limitations such as inefficient separation of photogenerated carriers and relatively low surface area have hindered the full potential of CN in CO2 photoreduction.

Recently, interest in CN-based heterojunctions has been further driven by the goal of improving carrier separation and enhancing photocatalytic efficiency. Among the various heterojunction architectures explored, the CN-based p-n heterojunction stands out due to its inherent built-in electric field, which facilitates accelerated charge transfer and mitigates rapid electron-hole recombination commonly observed in semiconductor systems. Despite substantial progress, current CN-based p-n heterojunctions often suffer from low production yields and limited selectivity in CO2 photoreduction, presenting significant barriers to efficient CO2 conversion.

Tellurium (Te), a typical p-type semiconductor, demonstrates excellent properties such as a rapid photoelectric response, strong light absorption and high carrier mobility, making it suitable for various applications. Additionally, Te exhibits good CO2 adsorption capacity, presenting further promise for its integration into CO2 reduction processes. Therefore, leveraging the synergy between Te and CN to develop efficient p-n heterojunctions could address existing limitations and maximize the effectiveness of CO2 photoreduction.

In a study published in Advanced Powder Materials, researchers from Shanghai University in China, and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, introduced a novel p-n heterojunction photocatalyst comprising ultrasmall Te nanoparticles and CN nanosheets, achieving nearly 100% CO2 conversion selectivity to CO.

“This is the first attempt to combine Te nanoparticles with CN nanosheets to create a p-n heterojunction that enhances electron-hole separation through a strong built-in electric field, achieving impressive results in photocatalytic CO2 reduction,” shares Liang Wang, senior and corresponding author of the study.

The team demonstrated the robust internal electric field of the p-n heterojunction accelerates electron transfer from Te nanoparticles to nitrogen sites on CN nanosheets, significantly reducing electron-hole recombination and enhancing CO2 reduction efficiency.

“The newly engineered p-n heterojunction achieves gas-solid photocatalytic CO2 conversion to CO without the need for sacrificial agents, reaching a yield of up to 92.0 μmol g-1 h-1 with nearly 100% selectivity. This performance surpasses that of most photocatalysts reported to date under similar conditions,” adds Wang.

The Te/C₃N₄ p-n heterojunction, synthesized via ammonia-assisted calcination, enhances the migration of photogenerated electrons through its built-in electric field, achieving nearly 100% selectivity in the photocatalytic conversion of CO₂ to CO.

Contact author details: Liang Wang (wangl@shu.edu.cn). Institute of Nanochemistry and Nanobiology, School of Environmental and Chemical Engineering, Shanghai University, 99 Shangda Road, BaoShan District, Shanghai 200444, P. R. China. Zheng Liu (Z.Liu@ntu.edu.sg). School of Materials Science and Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798, Singapore.

Funder: The project was funded by China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2023T160406) and Shanghai Pujiang Program (21PJD022). This project was also supported by Singapore Ministry of Education AcRF Tier 2 (MOE-MOET2EP10121-0006) and AcRF Tier 1 (RG7/21). This work is Supported by Shanghai Technical Service Center of Science and Engineering Computing, Shanghai University.

Conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

See the article: by Huange Liao, et al. Atmosphere engineering of metal-free Te/C3N4 p-n heterojunction for nearly 100% photocatalytic converting CO2 to CO. Advanced Powder Materials, Volume 3, Issue 6, 2024, pages 100243. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apmate.2024.100243

 

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