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.
CITATION STYLE
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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