Achieving Almost 100% Selectivity in Photocatalytic CO Reduction to Methane via In-Situ Atmosphere Regulation Strategy.

Adv Mater

Key Laboratory of Photochemistry, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100190, P. R. China.

Published: August 2024

Artificial photosynthesis, harnessing solar energy to convert CO into hydrocarbons, presents a promising solution for climate change and energy scarcity. However, photocatalytic CO reduction often terminates at the CO stage due to limited electron transfer capacity, hindering the formation of higher-energy hydrocarbons such as CH. This study introduces, for the first time, an in-situ atmosphere regulation strategy, refined from molecular imprinting methodologies, using dynamically reacting molecules to precisely engineer photocatalytic surface sites for selective *CO adsorption and hydrogenation in CO-to-CH conversion. Specifically, the single-atom Cu catalyst (Cu-SA-CO) is prepared by anchoring single-atom Cu onto defective TiO substrates (Cu-SA-CO) under a CO reduction atmosphere. Under illumination, the catalyst exhibited outstanding CH selectivity (almost 100%) and productivity (58.5 µmol g h). Mechanistic investigations reveal that the coordination environment of the Cu single atoms is significantly affected by dynamically reacting molecules (CO and *CHO) during synthesis, leading to a Ti-Cu-O structure. The structure, with the synergistic interaction between Cu single atoms and oxygen defects, significantly enhances *CO adsorption and hydrogenation, thereby promoting the formation of methane. This work pioneers the use of dynamically reactive molecules as imprinted templates to tune photocatalytic CO reduction selectivity, providing a novel avenue for designing efficient photocatalysts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202405825DOI Listing

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