Metastable Ni(I)-TiO2-x Photocatalysts: Self-Amplifying H2 Evolution from Plain Water without Noble Metal Co-Catalyst and Sacrificial Agent

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Abstract

Decoration of semiconductor photocatalysts with cocatalysts is generally done by a step-by-step assembly process. Here, we describe the self-assembling and self-activating nature of a photocatalytic system that forms under illumination of reduced anatase TiO2 nanoparticles in an aqueous Ni2+ solution. UV illumination creates in situ a Ni+/TiO2/Ti3+ photocatalyst that self-activates and, over time, produces H2 at a higher rate. In situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy show that key to self-assembly and self-activation is the light-induced formation of defects in the semiconductor, which enables the formation of monovalent nickel (Ni+) surface states. Metallic nickel states, i.e., Ni0, do not form under the dark (resting state) or under illumination (active state). Once the catalyst is assembled, the Ni+ surface states act as electron relay for electron transfer to form H2 from water, in the absence of sacrificial species or noble metal cocatalysts.

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Altomare, M., Qin, S., Saveleva, V. A., Badura, Z., Tomanec, O., Mazare, A., … Schmuki, P. (2023). Metastable Ni(I)-TiO2-x Photocatalysts: Self-Amplifying H2 Evolution from Plain Water without Noble Metal Co-Catalyst and Sacrificial Agent. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 145(48), 26122–26132. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c08199

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