Synthesis of mixed-valence Cu phthalocyanine/graphene/g-C3N4 ultrathin heterojunctions as efficient photocatalysts for CO2 reduction†
Abstract
Although g-C3N4-based heterojunctions show promise for photocatalytic CO2 reduction, enhancing charge separation and creating sufficient catalytic sites remain challenges. In this study, mixed-valence CuPc/graphene/g-C3N4 (HT-CuPc/G/UCN) ultrathin heterojunctions (∼4.8 nm thickness) with Cu1+/Cu2+ species were constructed by H-bond induced assembly and subsequent post-treatment with H2. The optimized H100-CuPc/G/UCN sample showed 36-times higher activity than bare ultrathin g-C3N4 (UCN) for photocatalytic CO2 reduction to CO. Based on atomic force microscopy images, normalized photocurrent action spectra, electron paramagnetic resonances, and in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectra, it was confirmed that the unexpected photocatalytic activity of H100-CuPc/G/UCN was attributed to the dual-functional roles of the introduced graphene: to increase the optimized amount of CuPc and enhance the high-level-energy electrons transferring from UCN to CuPc and the created Cu1+/Cu2+ species by H2 reduction as active catalytic sites for CO2 reduction. This work provides a comprehensively feasible strategy for preparing rational heterojunctions toward high-efficiency solar-driven CO2 reduction.