Engineering the Atomic Interface with Single Platinum Atoms for Enhanced Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production
Article 2019 en
Authors
YC
Yuanjun Chen
SJ
Shufang Ji
WS
Wenming Sun
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract It is highly desirable but challenging to optimize the structure of photocatalysts at the atomic scale to facilitate the separation of electron–hole pairs for enhanced performance. Now, a highly efficient photocatalyst is formed by assembling single Pt atoms on a defective TiO 2 support (Pt 1 /def‐TiO 2 ). Apart from being proton reduction sites, single Pt atoms promote the neighboring TiO 2 units to generate surface oxygen vacancies and form a Pt‐O‐Ti 3+ atomic interface. Experimental results and density functional theory calculations demonstrate that the Pt‐O‐Ti 3+ atomic interface effectively facilitates photogenerated electrons to transfer from Ti 3+ defective sites to single Pt atoms, thereby enhancing the separation of electron–hole pairs. This unique structure makes Pt 1 /def‐TiO 2 exhibit a record‐level photocatalytic hydrogen production performance with an unexpectedly high turnover frequency of 51423 h −1 , exceeding the Pt nanoparticle supported TiO 2 catalyst by a factor of 591.
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