| Literature DB >> 31263224 |
Yasuhiro Shiraishi1,2,3, Takahiro Takii4,5, Takumi Hagi4,5, Shinnosuke Mori4,5, Yusuke Kofuji4,5, Yasutaka Kitagawa5, Shunsuke Tanaka6, Satoshi Ichikawa7, Takayuki Hirai4,5.
Abstract
Artificial photosynthesis is a critical challenge in moving towards a sustainable energy future. Photocatalytic generation of hydrogen peroxide from water and dioxygen (H2O + [Formula: see text]O2 → H2O2, ΔG° = 117 kJ mol-1) by sunlight is a promising strategy for artificial photosynthesis because H2O2 is a storable and transportable fuel that can be used directly for electricity generation. All previously reported powder photocatalysts, however, have suffered from low efficiency in H2O2 generation. Here we report that resorcinol-formaldehyde resins, widely used inexpensive polymers, act as efficient semiconductor photocatalysts to provide a new basis for H2O2 generation. Simple high-temperature hydrothermal synthesis (~523 K) produces low-bandgap resorcinol-formaldehyde resins comprising π-conjugated and π-stacked benzenoid-quinoid donor-acceptor resorcinol couples. The resins absorb broad-wavelength light up to 700 nm and catalyse water oxidation and O2 reduction by the photogenerated charges. Simulated sunlight irradiation of the resins stably generates H2O2 with more than 0.5% solar-to-chemical conversion efficiency. Therefore, this metal-free system shows significant potential as a new artificial photosynthesis system.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31263224 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0398-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841