The construction of Ru-doped In2O3 hollow peanut-like structure for an enhanced photocatalytic nitrogen reduction under solar light irradiation†
Abstract
The synthesis of metal–organic framework (MOF) materials has been considered as an effective strategy for the design and fabrication of various nanostructured metal-based functional photocatalysts recently. Herein, Ru-doped In2O3 hollow peanuts (denoted as Ru–In2O3 HPNs) derived from MIL-68-In(Ru) precursor calcined in air was employed as an efficient photocatalytic system for the photoreduction of nitrogen. The TEM images revealed the uniform distribution of In2O3 nanoparticles, which are in situ-assembled to form a hollow peanut structure. Accordingly, this tailored nanostructure facilitates the separation and transportation of photoinduced electron–hole pairs and favor light harvesting by multi-reflection/scattering. Moreover, Ru dopants are intentionally introduced into the In2O3 semiconductor as active sites, which not only narrows the bandgap energy but also causes the formation of abundant oxygen vacancies (OVs), promoting the photocatalytic reduction reaction. As a result, the unique structure of Ru–In2O3 exhibited the highest photocatalytic activity of 44.5 μmol g−1 h−1 for ammonia production under solar-light irradiation, which is 5.7-times and much higher than that of pure In2O3 hollow peanuts and bulk In2O3, respectively. Further, Ru–In2O3 HPNs exhibited excellent stability for photocatalytic nitrogen fixation by showing no obvious activity decay for six consecutive two-hour tests (12 h). This work might open up some insights into the target-directed design of hollow materials for the photocatalytic nitrogen fixation.