Laser Ablation Nanoarchitectonics of Au-Cu Alloys Deposited on TiO2Photocatalyst Films for Switchable Hydrogen Evolution from Formic Acid Dehydrogenation

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Abstract

The regulation of H2 evolution from formic acid dehydrogenation using recyclable photocatalyst films is an essential approach for on-demand H2 production. We have successfully generated Au-Cu nanoalloys using a laser ablation method and deposited them on TiO2 photocatalyst films (AuxCu100-x/TiO2). The Au-Cu/TiO2 films were employed as photocatalysts for H2 production from formic acid dehydrogenation under light-emitting diode (LED) irradiation (365 nm). The highest H2 evolution rate for Au20Cu80/TiO2 is archived to 62,500 μmol h-1 g-1 per photocatalyst weight. The remarkable performance of Au20Cu80/TiO2 may account for the formation of Au-rich surfaces and the effect of Au alloying that enables Cu to sustain the metallic form on its surface. The metallic Au-Cu surface on TiO2 is vital to supply the photoexcited electrons of TiO2 to its surface for H2 evolution. The rate-determining step (RDS) is identified as the reaction of a surface-active species with protons. The results establish a practical preparation of metal alloy deposited on photocatalyst films using laser ablation to develop efficient photocatalysts.

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Hong, D., Sharma, A., Jiang, D., Stellino, E., Ishiyama, T., Postorino, P., … Koga, K. (2022). Laser Ablation Nanoarchitectonics of Au-Cu Alloys Deposited on TiO2Photocatalyst Films for Switchable Hydrogen Evolution from Formic Acid Dehydrogenation. ACS Omega, 7(35), 31260–31270. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c03509

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