W18O49 nanowire alignments with a BiOCl shell as an efficient photocatalyst†
Abstract
Top-down nanostructure engineering and band engineering are promising methods for fabricating efficient photocatalysts with enhanced optical and electronic properties; however, composites with simultaneously engineered structure and band are very rare. Herein, we constructed a unique architecture composed of a W18O49 nanowire alignment core and porous BiOCl shell (WA@BiOCl), which combined the advantages of both an assembly structure and a type II core–shell heterojunction. The W18O49 alignments (WA) were synthesized using a “one-pot” solvothermal treatment of WCl6/NaNO3via NO3−-mediated assembly, whereas the W18O49 nanowires with BiOCl shell (W@BiOCl) were obtained using WCl6/BiCl3. Then, WA@BiOCl, in contrast to W@BiOCl alignments, were fabricated when WCl6 and Bi(NO3)3 were present in the starting mixture. Optical absorption, photoelectrochemical measurements and photoluminescence characterizations show that either the alignments or the core–shell heterojunctions can enhance light harvesting, photo-charge transfer and collection. As a synergetic result, the WA@BiOCl architecture exhibited very high photoactivity and photostability. Under UV-vis (or vis) irradiation, WA@BiOCl is 2.43 (1.93), 3.93 (2.73) and 5.34 (3.44)-fold more active than W@BiOCl, WA and W18O49, respectively. The results demonstrate that the simultaneous nanostructure and band engineering can produce a more efficient photocatalyst than a single strategy alone, which suggests a potential method for the fabrication of photocatalysts in the fields of environment and energy.