| Literature DB >> 28859235 |
Dana Schwarz1, Yu Noda1,2, Jan Klouda3, Karolina Schwarzová-Pecková3, Ján Tarábek2, Jiří Rybáček2, Jiří Janoušek2,4, Frank Simon5, Maksym V Opanasenko6, Jiří Čejka6, Amitava Acharjya7, Johannes Schmidt7, Sören Selve7, Valentin Reiter-Scherer8, Nikolai Severin8, Jürgen P Rabe8, Petra Ecorchard9, Junjie He10, Miroslav Polozij10, Petr Nachtigall10, Michael J Bojdys1,2.
Abstract
Design and synthesis of ordered, metal-free layered materials is intrinsically difficult due to the limitations of vapor deposition processes that are used in their making. Mixed-dimensional (2D/3D) metal-free van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures based on triazine (C3 N3 ) linkers grow as large area, transparent yellow-orange membranes on copper surfaces from solution. The membranes have an indirect band gap (Eg,opt = 1.91 eV, Eg,elec = 1.84 eV) and are moderately porous (124 m2 g-1 ). The material consists of a crystalline 2D phase that is fully sp2 hybridized and provides structural stability, and an amorphous, porous phase with mixed sp2 -sp hybridization. Interestingly, this 2D/3D vdW heterostructure grows in a twinned mechanism from a one-pot reaction mixture: unprecedented for metal-free frameworks and a direct consequence of on-catalyst synthesis. Thanks to the efficient type I heterojunction, electron transfer processes are fundamentally improved and hence, the material is capable of metal-free, light-induced hydrogen evolution from water without the need for a noble metal cocatalyst (34 µmol h-1 g-1 without Pt). The results highlight that twinned growth mechanisms are observed in the realm of "wet" chemistry, and that they can be used to fabricate otherwise challenging 2D/3D vdW heterostructures with composite properties.Entities:
Keywords: 2D materials; conjugated microporous polymers; donor-acceptor; membranes; triazine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28859235 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201703399
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849