Charge self-regulation of Ti sites in Ti3C2 MXene via rich unsaturated Ti for boosted photocatalytic hydrogen generation†
Abstract
Recently, Ti3C2 MXene has been widely regarded as an effective cocatalyst to boost the hydrogen-generation activity of photocatalysts due to its high specific area, outstanding electronic conductivity, and flexible adjustability of its terminal groups. However, the basal plane of Ti3C2 MXene contains multiple dormant F-terminal groups from F-contained etchants (referred to as Ti3C2Fx), resulting in strong H-adsorption affinity of Ti for the limited hydrogen generation rate. To weaken the H-adsorption affinity of Ti, in this paper, a charge self-regulation strategy by increasing the antibonding-orbital occupancy of Ti–Hads bonds is revealed in rich unsaturated Ti structure in Ti3C2Fx (referred to as Ti3C2Fx-U). Herein, the Ti3C2Fx-U cocatalyst was prepared by an NH4F-assisted etching method at a controllable temperature and later tightly combined with TiO2via an ultrasound-assisted method to obtain Ti3C2Fx-U/TiO2. Photocatalytic H2-evolution results showed that Ti3C2Fx-U/TiO2 has superior H2-production activity (379 μmol g−1 h−1), which was 27 and 1.82 times higher compared to that of TiO2 and Ti3C2Fx/TiO2, respectively. Characterizations and DFT calculations demonstrated that unsaturated Ti sites can weaken the atomic H-adsorption ability of Ti by increasing the antibonding-orbital occupancy state in Ti3C2Fx-U. This work provides a new idea for tuning the H-adsorption ability of active sites to develop efficient MXene cocatalysts for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution.