| Literature DB >> 31131201 |
Yong-Chao Zhang1,2, Nisha Afzal1,2, Lun Pan1,2, Xiangwen Zhang1,2, Ji-Jun Zou1,2.
Abstract
Photocatalytic water splitting is promising for hydrogen energy production using solar energy and developing highly efficient photocatalysts is challenging. Defect engineering is proved to be a very useful strategy to promote the photocatalytic performance of metal-based photocatalysts, however, the vital role of defects is still ambiguous. This work comprehensively reviews point defective metal-based photocatalysts for water splitting, focusing on understanding the defects' disorder effect on optical adsorption, charge separation and migration, and surface reaction. The controllable synthesis and tuning strategies of defective structure to improve the photocatalytic performance are summarized, then the characterization techniques and density functional theory calculations are discussed to unveil the defect structure, and analyze the defects induced electronic structure change of catalysts and its ultimate effect on the photocatalytic activity at the molecular level. Finally, the challenge in developing more efficient defective metal-based photocatalysts is outlined. This work may help further the understanding of the fundamental role of defect structure in the photocatalytic reaction process and guide the rational design and fabrication of highly efficient and low-cost photocatalysts.Entities:
Keywords: defect engineering; defects‐activity relationship; metal‐based materials; photocatalysis; water splitting
Year: 2019 PMID: 31131201 PMCID: PMC6524102 DOI: 10.1002/advs.201900053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Sci (Weinh) ISSN: 2198-3844 Impact factor: 16.806
Figure 1a) High resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) images of TiO2 nanocrystals after hydrogenation, and b) DOS of disorder‐engineered black TiO2 nanocrystals. c) The hydrogen evolution from water splitting on disorder‐engineered black TiO2 nanocrystals. Reproduced with permission.14 Copyright 2011, Science. d–g) The charge density difference of water‐adsorbed BiOCl surfaces and the corresponding PDOS of adsorbed water. Reproduced with permission.32 Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.
Figure 2a) Low temperature (120 K) EPR spectra of defected and normal TiO2. b) Schematic fabrication procedures of Ti defected TiO2 and c) optimized cell structures of Ti‐defected TiO2 and normal anatase TiO2. d) Mott–Schottky plots measured in a standard three‐electrode setup using defected TiO2 electrode as working electrode. e) Magnetization (M–H) curves of defected TiO2 measured at 300 K and M–T curve of defected TiO2 in the field of 4000 oersted. f) Time course of hydrogen generation. Reproduced with permission.7 Copyright 2015, American Chemical Society.
Figure 3a) Schematic fabrication procedures of p‐type TiO2 and TiO2 p–n homojunction. b) TEM images. c) Low‐temperature (120 K) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of p‐type TiO2, n‐type TiO2, PN‐x, and NN‐0.5. d) Time course of photocatalytic hydrogen generation. e) Schematic illustration of charge separation and transfer in p–n homojunction. Reproduced with permission.13 Copyright 2016, Elsevier. f) The illustration of the formation of the amorphous‐anatase TiO2 from amorphous TiO2 and proposed mechanism of the photocatalytic properties. g) Charge density difference of TiO2 with junction of O‐vacancies and Ti‐vacancies and normal TiO2. Reproduced with permission.46 Copyright 2018, Wiley‐VCH. h) Schematic diagram of the fabrication procedure for Li‐EDA treated WO3. Reproduced with permission.47 Copyright 2016, Wiley‐VCH.
Summary of typical defective metal‐based photocatalysts with different synthesis methods
| Catalysts | Defect manufacturing method | Defect type | Application | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
NiCo2O4, | Heat treatment under air atmosphere | Oxygen vacancy | Electrocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| ZnS | Adding sulfur powder | Sulfur vacancy |
Photocatalytic |
|
| TiO2 | Annealing under ultrahigh vacuum and high temperature | Oxygen vacancy | Electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution |
|
| ZnO | High‐pressure torsion | Oxygen vacancy | RhB photodegradation |
|
| TiO2 | Aluminum reduction | Oxygen vacancy | Sonic‐/photoinduced tumor eradication |
|
| ZnS | Hydrothermal with adding sodium sulfide | Zinc vacancy |
Photocatalytic |
|
| TiO2 | Vapor‐induced hydro‐thermal hydrolysis | Oxygen and titanium vacancies | Benzene photocatalytic oxidation |
|
| CeO2 | NaBH4 hydrothermal reduction | Oxygen vacancy | Photocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| BiOCl | Redox reaction between BiOCl and hot ethylene glycol | Oxygen vacancy | Photocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| BiO2−
| Hydrothermal and liquid exfoliation | Oxygen vacancy | RhB and phenol photodegradation |
|
| WO3 | Solution‐based reducing agent | Oxygen and tungsten vacancies | Photo‐electrochemical water oxidation |
|
| FeO | Calcining with different atmosphere and time | Oxygen vacancy | Nitroarene hydrogenation |
|
| Co3O4 | Hydrothermal method with controlling crystalline | Oxygen vacancy | Supercapacitors |
|
| ZnO | Solvothermal with thermal calcination | Metal vacancy | RhB photodegradation |
|
| TiO2 | Solvothermal with thermal calcination | Metal vacancy |
Photocatalytic |
|
| Co3O4 | Solvothermal with thermal calcination | Metal vacancy | Electrocatalytic oxygen evolution reaction |
|
| BiOCl | Alcohol method | Metal vacancy | RhB photodegradation |
|
| BiPO4 | Ball‐milling method | Oxygen and metal vacancies | MB photocatalytic degradation |
|
| TiO2 | Solvothermal with thermal calcination | Oxygen and metal vacancies | Photo‐electrochemical and photocatalytic H2 production |
|
| Fe–Mn–O hybrid nanosheets | Reflux and low‐temperature calcination | Oxygen and metal vacancies | Electrocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| W18O49 | Molybdenum doping | Oxygen vacancy | Solar‐driven nitrogen fixation |
|
| WO3 | Thermal treatment with H2 | Oxygen vacancy | Visible light photocatalytic water oxidation |
|
Figure 4a) HAADF‐STEM images of KLu2F7:38%Yb3+, 2%Er3+ nanoparticles. Reproduced with permission.75 Copyright 2017, American Chemical Society. b) The H2O/TiO2(110) system at room and low temperature ((a') The bare surface imaged at room temperature. (b') After 10−2 L of water exposure at room temperature. (c') After exposure to 10−2 L of H2O at 180 K, imaged at 160 K. (d') Same conditions as (c')). Reproduced with permission.77 Copyright 2001, American Institute of Physics. c) XANES and d) Fourier transforms of k‐space oscillations for Co3O4, Co‐500, and Co‐300. Reproduced with permission.8 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society. e) Bi L‐edge extended XAFS oscillation function k2χ(k) and f) the corresponding Fourier transforms for the BiOCl with and without OVs. Reproduced with permission.32 Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.
Figure 5a) EPR spectra of different samples with the same weight (red area showed the integration method for OV quantification). b) Quantification of the oxygen vacancies concentration of sample (OV‐3). Reproduced with permission.80 Copyright 2018, Elsevier. c) Positron lifetime spectrum of ultrathin CoSe2 nanosheets and bulk CoSe2, respectively. d) Schematic representations of trapped positrons of cobalt vacancies. Reproduced with permission.82 Copyright 2014, American Chemical Society. e) Raman spectra of ZnO before/after high‐pressure torsion (HPT) processing. Reproduced with permission.54 Copyright 2017, Royal Society of Chemistry. f) The TG–differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) curve of monolayer BiO2− . Reproduced with permission.24 Copyright 2018, Wiley‐VCH.
Figure 6a) Cross‐sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and large‐region cross‐sectional STEM image of reduced TiO2(110) single crystal in HAADF mode. b) OV concentration from the inner bulk region to the surface region. c) STM image of the reduced TiO2 surface with two individual OVs in the empty state (1.2 V, 20 pA) and Ti3+ ions in the filled state (−2.3 V, 10 pA). d) Linear sweep voltammetric (LSV) data on different electrocatalysts for the HER at the rate of 10 mV s−1. Reproduced with permission.59 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society. e,f) Charge density difference of Ti‐defected and normal TiO2. Reproduced with permission.7 Copyright 2015, American Chemical Society.
Summarized opinions on role of surface, subsurface and bulk defects in photocatalytic, electrocatalytic, and other reactions
| Photocatalysts | Defect type | Defect position | Role of defect in reaction | Reactions | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Subsurface | Enhancing conductivity, promoting electron transfer, and hydrogen desorption | Electrocatalytic H2 evolution |
|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface and bulk | Decreasing bulk/surface defects ratio promote e−/h+ separation, bulk defects inducing charge recombination | Photocatalytic benzene oxidation |
|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Promoting N2 adsorption and activation | Photocatalytic fixation of nitrogen |
|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface/subsurface and bulk | Surface/subsurface defects enhance charge‐carrier separation, bulk defects induce charge recombination |
Photocatalytic |
|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface and bulk | Promoting separation of electron–hole pairs, enhancing light absorption, increasing donor density |
Photocatalytic |
|
| TiO2 | Titanium vacancies | Surface and bulk | Inducing p‐type conductivity, room‐temperature ferromagnetism, more efficient charge separation and transfer |
Photocatalytic |
|
| TiO2 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface and subsurface | Subsurface defects improve light‐harvesting and facilitate charge separation, ensuring stability of surface catalytic sites | Theoretical calculation oxygen evolution |
|
| MoS2 | Sulfur vacancy | Surface | As new catalytic sites, regulating hydrogen adsorption free energy, improving catalytic activity | Electrocatalytic H2 evolution |
|
| ZnS | Zinc vacancy | Surface | Modifying electronic structure, inhibiting photocorrsion, promoting charge separation and electrons transfer | Photocatalytic H2 evolution |
|
| WO3 | Oxygen and tungsten vacancies | Surface | Facilitating interface charge transfer, improving conductivity | Photo‐electrochemical water oxidation |
|
| WO3 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Appropriate concentration oxygen defects suppress the recombination of photoinduced carriers. | Photocatalytic oxygen evolution |
|
| WO3 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface and bulk | Both surface and bulk oxygen vacancies promote the activity, surface vacancies play more role than bulk vacancies | Photocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| Co3O4 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Creating more active sites, improving electronic conductivity | Electrocatalytic oxygen evolution |
|
| ZnO | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Enhancing activation of CO2 | CO2 electrochemical reduction |
|
| SrTiO3 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Appropriate concentration oxygen defects improve photocatalytic performance | Photocatalytic H2 evolution |
|
| BiOBr | Oxygen vacancy | Bulk | Excitons can be dissociated into charge carriers with the incorporation of oxygen vacancy | Photocatalytic superoxide radical generation, selective oxidative‐coupling reaction |
|
| BiOCl | Bismuth and oxygen vacancies | Surface/subsurface and bulk | Surface/subsurface defects narrow bandgap and as active sites, promoting charge‐carrier separation, bulk defects introduce carrier trapping and as recombination sites | Photocatalytic water splitting |
|
| BiOCl | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Activating H2O, facilitating water oxidation | Photocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| BiPO4 | Bismuth and oxygen vacancies | Bulk | Inhibiting the separation of photogenerated charges, reducing photocatalytic activity | Photocatalytic degradation of pollutants |
|
| NiCo2O4 | Oxygen vacancy | Surface | Lowering adsorption energy of H2O and increasing OER efficiency | Electrocatalytic water oxidation |
|
| SnCoFe perovskite hydroxide | Tin vacancy | Surface | Exposing more CoFe active sites, modulating conductivity, increasing OER performance | Electrocatalytic oxygen evolution |
|
| Bi6S2O15 | Bismuth vacancy | Surface and bulk | Improving light response ability and bandgap narrowing, promoting separation of photoinduced electron–hole pairs, bulk defects acting as recombination center of electron–hole pairs | Photocatalytic methylene blue decomposition |
|
Figure 7a) Three oxygen evolution reaction mechanisms on g‐C3N4. Reproduced with permission.104 Copyright 2015, Elsevier. b) TiO2 (101) model and potential energy diagram for the water dissociation pathway. Reproduced with permission.105 Copyright 2003, American Institute of Physics. c) Potential energy profiles for water dehydrogenation and O–O bond formation. Reproduced with permission.5 Copyright 2018, Elsevier. d) Overall water splitting reaction on pure BiOCl (001) surface and surface oxygen vacancy BiOCl (001) surface. Reproduced with permission.35 Copyright 2015, Wiley‐VCH.
Figure 8a) One of the dual pathways (pathway I) occurring on the Ti row. b) The other pathway (pathway II) involving bridge oxygen. c) Influence of different kinetic barriers (water dissociation, O–O coupling and hole diffusion) and Ch+ on the total turnover frequency (TOF). d) The contribution ratio between pathways I and II to the total TOF. Reproduced with permission.108 Copyright 2018, Springer Nature.
Figure 9a) The DOS of perfect TiO2 nanosheets, oxygen vacancies TiO2, and titanium vacancies TiO2. Reproduced with permission.109 Copyright 2012, American Chemical Society. b) Total and projected charge density of states for Co3O4 and Co‐defected Co3− O4, and c) the optimized cell structures and the corresponding charge density mapping images. d) Optimized structures of water adsorbed on perfect Co3O4(111) and Co‐defected Co3− O4(111). e) Deformation charge density of H2O‐adsorbed structure of Co3O4 and f) Co‐defected Co3− O4. Reproduced with permission.8 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society. g) DOS and potential surfaces of TiO2 (101) surfaces. h) Simulated charge distribution. Reproduced with permission.66 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society. i) Schematic diagram of the electromagnet‐photocatalysis apparatus. Reproduced with permission.112 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society. j) Schematic illustration of B‐TiO2− ‐PEG for enhanced/synergistic sonodynamic and photothermal therapy of cancer cells. Reproduced with permission.51 Copyright 2018, American Chemical Society.
Summarized photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity of defect‐based photocatalysts
| Reaction Type | Catalysts | Sacrificial Agents | Cocatalysts | Illumination | Activity [µmol [gcat h]−1] | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HER |
Ti defected TiO2
| CH3OH | 1.0 wt% Pt | UV light |
29 800 |
|
| HER |
TiO2 with Ti and O vacancies | CH3OH | 1.0 wt% Pt | UV light |
50 300 |
|
| HER |
O defected TiO2
| CH3OH/H2O | 1.0 wt% Pt | λ > 400 nm |
115 |
|
| HER |
O defected TiO2
| CH3OH/H2O | 1.0 wt% Pt | Simulated sunlight |
2139 |
|
| HER |
Sub‐10 nm rutile TiO2
| CH3OH/H2O | 1.0 wt% Pt | λ > 400 nm |
932 |
|
| HER |
Zn defected ZnS | Na2S/Na2SO3 | None | λ ≥ 420 nm |
337 |
|
|
HER |
Cu defected Cu2
| None | 10 wt% Pd | λ > 420 nm |
157 040 |
|
| HER |
Surface defected Zn‐Cd‐S |
Na2S/ | Pt | λ > 420 nm |
11 400 |
|
| HER |
Ti3+ self‐doped TiO2
| CH3OH/H2O | 1.0 wt% Pt | λ > 400 nm |
181 |
|
| HER |
O defected K4Nb6O17
| CH3OH | None | 300 W Xe lamp |
1661 |
|
| HER |
O defected SrTiO3
| CH3OH | 1.0 wt% Pt | UV–vis |
2200 |
|
| OER |
O defected CeO2
| AgNO3 | None | λ ≥ 420 nm |
137 |
|
| OER |
O defected BiOCl (010) | None | None | UV light |
100 |
|
| OER |
O defected CeO2
| AgNO3 | None | λ ≥ 420 nm |
353 |
|
| OER |
H2 treated WO3
| AgNO3 | None | λ ≥ 420 nm |
376 |
|
| OER |
O defected WO3
| AgNO3 | None | λ > 400 nm |
120 |
|