| Literature DB >> 32267152 |
Yasuhiro Shiraishi1, Masaki Hashimoto1, Kiyomichi Chishiro1, Kenta Moriyama1, Shunsuke Tanaka2, Takayuki Hirai1.
Abstract
Ammonia is an indispensable chemical. Photocatalytic NH3 production via dinitrogen fixation using water by sunlight illumination under ambient conditions is a promising strategy, although previously reported catalysts show insufficient activity. Herein, we showed that ultraviolet light irradiation of a semiconductor, bismuth oxychloride with surface oxygen vacancies (BiOCl-OVs), in water containing chloride anions (Cl-) under N2 flow efficiently produces NH3. The surface OVs behave as the N2 reduction sites by the photoformed conduction band electrons. The valence band holes are consumed by self-oxidation of interlayer Cl- on the catalyst. The hypochloric acid (HClO) formed absorbs ultraviolet light and undergoes photodecomposition into O2 and Cl-. These consecutive photoreactions produce NH3 with water as the electron donor. The Cl- in solution compensates for the removed interlayer Cl- and inhibits catalyst deactivation. Simulated sunlight illumination of the catalyst in seawater stably generates NH3 with 0.05% solar-to-chemical conversion efficiency, thus exhibiting significant potential of the seawater system for artificial photosynthesis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32267152 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c01683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419