Solar-driven production of hydrogen peroxide (H O ), as an important industrial chemical oxidant with an extensive range of applications, from oxygen reduction is a sustainable alternative to mainstream anthraquinone oxidation and direct hydrogenation of dioxygen methods. The efficiency of solar to hydrogen peroxide over semiconductor-based photocatalysts is still largely limited by the narrow light absorption to visible light. Here, the authors proposed and demonstrate the proof-of-concept application of light-generated hot electrons in a graphene/semiconductor (exemplified with widely used TiO ) dyad to largely extend visible light spectra up to 800 nm for efficient H O production. The well-designed graphene/semiconductor heterojunction has a rectifying interface with a zero barrier for the hot electron injection, largely boosting excited hot electrons with an average lifetime of ≈0.5 ps into charge carriers with a long fluorescent lifetime (4.0 ns) for subsequent H O production. The optimized dyadic photocatalyst can provide an H O yield of 0.67 mm g  h under visible light irradiation (λ ≥ 400 nm), which is 20 times of the state-of-the-art noble-metal-free titanium oxide-based photocatalyst, and even achieves an H O yield of 0.14 mm g  h upon photoexcitation by near-infrared-region light (≈800 nm).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202200885DOI Listing

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