Abstract
A long-standing trade-off exists between improving crystallinity and minimizing particle size in the synthesis of perovskite-type transition-metal oxynitride photocatalysts via the thermal nitridation of commonly used metal oxide and carbonate precursors. Here, we overcome this limitation to fabricate ATaO2N (A = Sr, Ca, Ba) single nanocrystals with particle sizes of several tens of nanometers, excellent crystallinity and tunable long-wavelength response via thermal nitridation of mixtures of tantalum disulfide, metal hydroxides (A(OH)2), and molten-salt fluxes (e.g., SrCl2) as precursors. The SrTaO2N nanocrystals modified with a tailored Ir–Pt alloy@Cr2O3 cocatalyst evolved H2 around two orders of magnitude more efficiently than the previously reported SrTaO2N photocatalysts, with a record solar-to-hydrogen energy conversion efficiency of 0.15% for SrTaO2N in Z-scheme water splitting. Our findings enable the synthesis of perovskite-type transition-metal oxynitride nanocrystals by thermal nitridation and pave the way for manufacturing advanced long-wavelength-responsive particulate photocatalysts for efficient solar energy conversion.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Xiao, J., Nakabayashi, M., Hisatomi, T., Vequizo, J. J. M., Li, W., Chen, K., … Domen, K. (2023). Sub-50 nm perovskite-type tantalum-based oxynitride single crystals with enhanced photoactivity for water splitting. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43838-3
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.