| Literature DB >> 32455943 |
Jundan Li1, Dongni Zhao1, Jiangqun Liu1, Anan Liu2, Dongge Ma1.
Abstract
Covalent organic frameworks (Entities:
Keywords: CO2 reduction; covalent organic frameworks; functional materials design; photocatalysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32455943 PMCID: PMC7288049 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25102425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Reduction potentials of CO2.
| Reaction | E0 (V) vs NHE at pH = 7 |
|---|---|
| 2H+ + 2e− → H2 | −0.41 |
| CO2 + e− → CO2− | −1.9 |
| CO2 + 2H+ + 2e− → HCOOH | −0.61 |
| CO2 + 2H+ + 2e− → CO + H2O | −0.53 |
| CO2 + 4H+ + 4e− → C + 2H2O | −0.2 |
| CO2 + 4H+ + 4e− → HCHO + H2O | −0.48 |
| CO2 + 6H+ + 6e− → CH3OH + H2O | −0.38 |
| CO2 + 8H+ + 8e− → CH4 + 2H2O | −0.24 |
| 2CO2 + 8H2O + 12e− → C2H4 + 12OH− | −0.34 |
| 2CO2 + 9H2O + 12e− → C2H5OH + 12OH− | −0.33 |
| 3CO2 + 13H2O + 18e− → C3H7OH + 18OH− | −0.32 |
Figure 1Proposed mechanism for the photocatalytic reduction of CO2 with DQTP-COF-M ((M = Zn, Ni and Co). Copied with permission from Elsevier 2019 [30].
Figure 2Schematic illustration of synthesis of the COF-367 NSs for CO2 photoreduction to CO and its STM image. Copied with permission from ACS 2020 [31].
Figure 3Schematic diagram of photocatalytic selective reduction of CO2 over Ni-TpBpy. Copied with permission from ACS 2019 [32].
Figure 4Proposed catalytic mechanism of Re-COF. Copied with permission from ACS 2019 [33].
Figure 5Top: Illustration for the construction steps of TpBpy and Re-TpBpy-COF. Down: Time course of CO production during photocatalytic CO2 reduction on (a) TpBpy-COF, (b) Re-Bpy, and (c) Re-TpBpy-COF photocatalysts under visible light irradiation. Insert: evolution of the CO vibration band during the CO2 reduction on Re-TpBpy-COF (time resolution 1 h/spectrum). Copied with permission from Elsevier 2019 [34].
Figure 6Synthesis of Bpy-sp2c-COF and Re-Bpy-sp2c-COF. Conditions for Bpy-sp2-c-COF: KOH (4 M) 1,2-dichlorobenzene and 1-butanol (1: 1 mixture), 120 °C, 72 h. Copied with permission form Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 [35].
Figure 7Top: Proposed reaction cycle for the photocatalytic CO2 reduction using COF and Co(dmg)2 as co-catalysts. Down: Proposed reaction cycle for the photo-catalytic reduction of CO2 into HCOOH. Copied with permission from Elsevier 2019 [36].
Figure 8Schematics of the mechanism of TTCOF-M CO2RR with H2O oxidation. Copied with permission from Wiley 2019 [37].
Figure 9Schematic diagram for the photocatalytic reduction of CO2 over azine-based COFs upon visible light irradiation. Copied with permission from Elsevier 2018 [38].
Figure 10Proposed photoactive electron transfer and reaction pathway in the photoreduction of CO2 (PET = photoinduced electron transfer). Copied with permission from Wiley 2019 [39].
Figure 11Schematic representation of the preparation of COF-318-SCs via the condensation of COF-318 and semiconductor materials. Copied with permission from Wiley 2020 [41].
Figure 12Schematic illustration of the CTF film photocatalyst-enzyme coupled system involved in the exclusive production of formic acid from CO2. Rhox = [Cp * Rh(bpy)H2O]2+, Rhred1 = Cp * Rh(bpy), Rhred2 = [Cp * Rh(bpy)H]+; Cp* = pentamethylcyclopentadienyl, bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine. Copied with permission from RSC 2016 [44].
Figure 13Top: Synthesis of CTF-py and Re-CTF-py materials. The inset shows the two types of pores (unit A and unit B). Down: (a) CO evolution over CTF-py, Re-CTF-py and the physical mixture of CTF-py and Re(CO)5Cl (Re and CTF-py) in the solid–gas system. (b) Photocatalytic activity of Re-bpy and Re-CTF-py in solid–gas and liquid–gas systems. (c) Production yield of CO over the Re-CTF-py photocatalyst to measure its reproducibility by cycling tests. Copied with permission from RSC 2018 [45].
The summary of photocatalytic CO2 reduction performance for COFs with different structure.
| Type | COFs | Light | Additive | Conditions | Product Yield | Selectivity (%) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enamine | DQTP-COF-Co | λ ≥ 420 nm | Ru(bpy)3Cl2/TEOA | Liquid | CO: 1.02 × 103 μmol·g−1·h−1 | 59.4 | [ |
| Imine | COF-367 -Co NS | λ ≥ 420 nm | Ru(bpy)3Cl2/ascorbic acid | Liquid | CO: 10,672 μmol·g−1·h−1 | 78 | [ |
| Enamine | TpBp-COF-Ni | λ ≥ 420 nm | Ru(bpy)3Cl2/TEOA | Liquid | CO: 966 μmol g−1 h−1 | 96 | [ |
| Imine | Re-COF | λ ≥ 390 nm | TEOA | Liquid | CO:780 μmol·g−1·h−1 | 98 | [ |
| Enamine | Re-TpBpy COFs | λ ≥ 390 nm | TEOA | Liquid | CO: 270.8 μmol·g−1 h−1 | N/A | [ |
| Olefin | Bpy-sp2-c-COF | λ ≥ 420 nm | TEOA | Liquid | CO: 1040 μmol·g−1 h−1 | 81 | [ |
| Enamine | TFPG-DAAQ-COF | λ = 445 nm | TEOA | Liquid | HCOOH: TOF = 6 | N/A | [ |
| Imine | TTCOF-Zn | 420–800 nm | None | Liquid | CO: 2.055 | 100 | [ |
| Azine | N3-COF | 420–800nm | None | Liquid | CH3OH:0.57μmol·g−1 h−1 | N/A | [ |
| Imine | TT-COF | λ > 420 nm | None | Solid-gaseous H2O | CO: 102.7 μmol·g−1·h−1 | 98 | [ |
| Imine | TAPPB-COF | 200–1000 nm | None | Solid-gaseous H2O | CO: 24.6 μmol·g−1·h−1 | 95.6 | [ |
| Arylether | COF-318-SCs | 380–800 nm | None | Solid-gaseous H2O | CO: 69.67 μmol·g−1·h−1 | N/A | [ |
| Triazine | CTF | λ ≥ 420 nm | β-NAD+/Rh complex/formate hydrogenase/ ascorbic acid | Liquid | HCOOH: 881.3 × 103 μmol·g−1·h−1 | N/A | [ |
| Triazine | Re-CTF-py | 200–1100 nm | TEOA | Solid–gas | CO: 353.05 μmol·g−1·h−1 | N/A | [ |
The summary of photocatalytic CO2 reduction efficiency using H2O as electron-donor for COFs and other semiconductor materials [47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61].
| Photocatalyst | Light Source | Product Yield μmol·g−1 h−1 | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| TTCOF-Zn | 420–800 nm 300 W Xe lamp | CO: 2.055 | [ |
| N3-COF | 420–800 nm 500 W Xe lamp | CH3OH: 0.57 | [ |
| TT-COF | Λ > 420 nm 300 W Xe lamp | CO: 102.7 | [ |
| TAPPB-COF | 200–1000 nm Xe lamp | CO: 24.6 | [ |
| COF-318-SCs | 380–800 nm 300 W Xe lamp | CO: 69.67 | [ |
| CPO-27-Mg/TiO2 | UV lamp 4 W 365 nm | CO: 4.09, CH4: 2.35 | [ |
| Well-crystallized ordered mesoporous TiO2 | UV-Vis 300W Xe lamp | CO: 0.145, CH4: 0.195 | [ |
| TiO2 | 300 W Xe lamp (λ ≥ 408 nm) | CO: 50.7, CH4: 13.5 | [ |
| Co-ZIF-9/TiO2 | UV-Vis 300 W Xe lamp (200 < λ < 900) | CO: 17.58 | [ |
| BiOBr | 300 W Xe lamp (λ ≥ 400 nm) | CO: 87.4 | [ |
| Defect-Rich Bi12O17Cl2 Nanotubes | 300 W Xe lamp | CO: 48.6 | [ |
| ZIF-8/C3N4 | 300 W full-spectrum Xe lamp | CH3OH: 0.75 | [ |
| QS-Co3O4 (ZIF-67) | 200 W Xe lamp (AM 1.5) | CO: 46.3 | [ |
| Bi4O5I2/g-C3N4 | 300 W Xe lamp (λ ≥ 400 nm) | CO: 45.6, CH4: 6 | [ |
| Z-scheme CdS– WO3 | 300 W Xe lamp (λ > 420 nm) | CH4:1.02 | [ |
| HCP-TiO2-FG | 300 W Xe lamp (λ ≥ 420 nm) | CO: 27.62, CH4: 21.63 | [ |
| α-Fe2O3/g-C3N4 | 300 W Xe lamp (λ≥ 420 nm) | CO: 27.2 | [ |
| C-TiO2-x@g-C3N4 | 300 W Xe lamp (λ ≥ 420 nm) | CO: 205 | [ |
| TiO2/N-doped-RGO | 400 W Xe lamp (λ = 250–400 nm) | CO: 44.56 | [ |
| TiO2/NH2-UiO-66 | 1500 W Xe lamp (λ > 325 nm | CO: 4.25 | [ |