Anchoring of NiCox alloy nanoparticles on nitrogen vacancy-rich carbon nitride nanotubes toward promoting efficiently photocatalytic CO2 conversion into solar fuel†
Abstract
Anchoring of NiCox alloy nanoparticles (NPs) onto nitrogen vacancy-rich carbon nitride nanotubes (NiCox/VN-CNNTs) with porous structure was well designed toward promoting efficiently photocatalytic conversion of CO2 into solar fuels in the presence of water vapor. NiCox/VN-CNNTs exhibit not only highly efficient generation of CO, but also a significant amount of CH4, compared to only CO and a trace amount of CH4 on pristine VN-CNNTs and single metal-loading VN-CNNTs. The photoexcited dynamics show that the synergy modulation of the NiCox alloy site and vacancy leverage of CNNT is beneficial for efficient separation of photoinduced electron–hole pairs, in favor of the multiple electron-involving reduction pathways for CH4 formation. Density functional theory simulations validate that the loaded NiCox alloy NPs also provide the driving force for accelerating the absorption of CO2, reducing the free energy of CO2-to-CH4 photoreduction, and decreasing desorption energy of the forming CH4. This work presents a viewpoint to engineer the composition of nanoalloy-based photocatalysts for improved CO2-to-CH4 photoreduction.