Solar-driven water splitting is highly desirable for hydrogen fuel production, particularly if water oxidation is effectively sustained in a complete cycle and/or by means of stable and efficient photocatalysts of main group elements, for example, carbon and nitrogen. Despite extensive success on H production on polymer photocatalysts, polymers have met with very limited success for the rate-determining step of the water splitting-water oxidation reaction due to the extremely slow "four-hole" chemistry. Here, the synthesized metal-free oxygenated covalent triazine (OCT) is remarkably active for oxygen production in a wide operation window from UV to visible and even to NIR (up to 800 nm), neatly matching the solar spectrum with an unprecedented external quantum efficiency (even 1% at 600 nm) apart from excellent activity for H production under full arc irradiation, a big step moving toward full solar spectrum water splitting. Experimental results and DFT calculations show that the oxygen incorporation not only narrows the band gap but also causes appropriate band-edge shifts. In the end, a controlled small amount of oxygen in the ionothermal reaction is found to be a promising and facile way of achieving such oxygen incorporation. This discovery is a significant step toward both scientific understanding and practical development of metal-free photocatalysts for cost-effective water oxidation and hydrogen generation over a large spectral window.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7525806 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.0c01153 | DOI Listing |
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