Chemically bonded BiVO₄/Bi₁₉Cl₃S₂₇ heterojunction with fast hole extraction dynamics for continuous CO₂ photoreduction

Surface charge localization and inferior charge transfer efficiency seriously restrict the supply of reactive hydrogen and the reaction dynamics of CO2 photoreduction performance of photocatalysts. Herein, chemically bonded BiVO4/Bi19Cl3S27 (BVO/BCS) S-scheme heterojunction with a strong internal el...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Huang, Baojing, Fu, Xinxin, Wang, Kai, Wang, Liang, Zhang, Hualei, Liu, Zhongyi, Liu, Bin, Li, Jun
Other Authors: School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171905
Description
Summary:Surface charge localization and inferior charge transfer efficiency seriously restrict the supply of reactive hydrogen and the reaction dynamics of CO2 photoreduction performance of photocatalysts. Herein, chemically bonded BiVO4/Bi19Cl3S27 (BVO/BCS) S-scheme heterojunction with a strong internal electric field is designed. Experimental and density function theory calculation results confirm that the elaborated heterojunction accelerates the vectorial migration of photogenerated charges from BiVO4 to Bi19Cl3S27 via the interfacial chemical bonding interactions (i.e., Bi-O and Bi-S bonds) between Bi atoms of BVO and S atoms of BCS or Bi atoms of BCS and O atoms of BVO under light irradiation, breaking the interfacial barrier and surface charge localization of Bi19Cl3S27, and further decreasing the energy of reactive hydrogen generation, CO2 absorption and activation. The separation efficiency of photogenerated carriers is much more efficient than that counterpart individual in BVO/BCS S-scheme heterojunction system. As a result, BVO/BCS heterojunction exhibits a significantly improved continuous photocatalytic performance for CO2 reduction and the 24 ​h CO yield reaches 678.27 ​μmol·g−1. This work provides an atomic-level insight into charge transfer kinetics and CO2 reduction mechanism in S-scheme heterojunction.