| Literature DB >> 31771298 |
Sivagowri Shanmugaratnam1,2, Dhayalan Velauthapillai1, Punniamoorthy Ravirajan2, Alfred Antony Christy3, Yohi Shivatharsiny4.
Abstract
Transition metal chalcogenides have intensively focused on photocatalytic hydrogen production for a decade due to their stronger edge and the quantum confinement effect. This work mainly focuses on synthesis and hydrogen production efficiencies of cobalt disulfide (CoS2)-embedded TiO2 nanocomposites. Materials are synthesized by using a hydrothermal approach and the hydrogen production efficiencies of pristine CoS2, TiO2 nanoparticles and CoS2/TiO2 nanocomposites are compared under UV irradiation. A higher amount of hydrogen production (2.55 mmol g-1) is obtained with 10 wt.% CoS2/TiO2 nanocomposite than pristineTiO2 nanoparticles, whereas no hydrogen production was observed with pristine CoS2 nanoparticles. This result unveils that the metal dichalcogenide-CoS2 acts as an effective co-catalyst and nanocrystalline TiO2 serves as an active site by effectively separating the photogenerated electron-hole pair. This study lays down a new approach for developing transition metal dichalcogenide materials with significant bandgaps that can effectively harness solar energy for hydrogen production.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogen; hydrothermal; titania; transition metal chalcogenides; water splitting
Year: 2019 PMID: 31771298 PMCID: PMC6926893 DOI: 10.3390/ma12233882
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1XRD patterns of the pristine CoS2, TiO2, and 10 wt.% CoS2/TiO2 nanocomposite.
Figure 2SEM images of the CoS2 (a,b), TiO2 (c,d), and 10 wt.% CoS2/TiO2 (e,f) nanocomposite.
Figure 3(a) Absorbance from diffuse reflectance spectra and (b) Tauc plots of pristine CoS2, TiO2 and 10 wt.% CoS2/TiO2 nanocomposite.
Amount of hydrogen evolved with different transition metal Chalcogenides: A comparison.
| Material | Synthesis Method | Rate of Hydrogen Evolution | Sacrificial Agent | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2D SnS2/g-C3N4 | Hydrothermal method | 0.97 mmol h−1 g−1 | 10 vol% TEOA and 3 wt.% H2Pt2Cl6·6H2O | Enzhou Liu et al., 2018 | [ |
| Te/SnS2/Ag | Hydrothermal method | 0.33 mmol h−1 | - | Changzeng Yan et al., 2017 | [ |
| SnS2 Nanosheets | Solvothermal | 1.06 mmol h−1 g−1 | 0.1 M Na2S | Jing yu et al., 2014 | [ |
| CdS/ WS2 | Impregnation-sulfidation | 0.42 mmol h−1 | Latic acid solution | Zong et al., 2011 | [ |
| Dye-Sensitized NiSx/ graphene | Insitu chemical deposition method | 0.04 mmol h−1 | - | Chao Kong et al., 2014 | [ |
| Dye-Sensitized NiSx/ graphene | Insitu chemical deposition method | 0.34 mmol h−1 | - | Chao Kong et al., 2014 | [ |
| MoS2/ RGO and CdS | Photoreduction method | 0.10 mmol h−1 | 10 vol.% Latic acid solution | Yuexiang Li et al., 2014 | [ |
| MoS2/Graphene | Hydrothermal | 1.80 mmol h−1 | Na2S-Na2S2O3 solution | Chang et al., 2014 | [ |
| MoS2 quantum dots/TiO2 nanotube arrays | Electrodeposition | 0.07 mmol cm−2 h−1 | - | Qun Wang et al., 2018 | [ |
| ZnTCPP-MoS2 /TiO2 | Hydrothermal | 0.10 mmol h−1 | 0.2 M triethanolamine (TEOA) aqueous | Youngjun Yuan et al., 2015 | [ |
| 10 wt.% CoS2/TiO2 | Hydrothermal | 2.55 mmol g−1 | Methanol | This work | |