Bandgap and adsorption engineering of carbon dots/TiO2 S-scheme heterojunctions for enhanced photocatalytic CO2 methanation

Wenlong Wang, Wentao Hao, Lang He, Jia Qiao, Ning Li, Chaoqiu Chen, Yong Qin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

S-scheme heterojunctions have garnered significant interest in photocatalytic CO2 conversion to valuable products (e.g., CH4) due to their enhanced charge separation and robust redox capabilities. Carbon dots (CDs), with their tunable band structures and light absorption ranges, show particular promise in constructing efficient S-scheme photocatalytic systems. Nevertheless, the critical roles of CDs' band alignment and surface adsorption properties in determining heterojunction configuration, charge carrier kinetics, and ultimately CO2 activation/product selectivity distribution remain insufficiently explored. Herein, we construct four CDs/TiO2 heterojunctions using CDs synthesized from varied carbon sources, in which S-scheme heterojunctions were successfully constructed based on cost-effective coal pitch (C-GQDs, 1.75 nm), glucose (G-CQDs, 1.84 nm), and acetone (CQDs-X, 1.82 nm) carbon sources, whereas Type-I heterojunctions were formed by carbon black based CDs (GQDs-A, 1.92 nm). Systematic investigations reveal that both the band structure and adsorption characteristics of CDs play important roles in the charge transfer path and separation efficiency, CO2 adsorption and activation capacities, and product selectivity in photocatalytic CO2 reduction. Remarkably, the introduction of CDs significantly broadens the photo-response range compared to fresh TiO2, and in particular, the C-GQDs/TiO2 exhibits exceptional performance with a CH4 production rate of 32.7 μmol·g−1·h−1, surpassing TiO2 by 6.3-fold and outperforming GQDs-A/TiO2, CQDs-X/TiO2, and G-CQDs/TiO2 by factors of 3.8, 2.7, and 2.3, respectively. This heterojunction simultaneously achieves 72.6 % CH4 selectivity and 98.1 % hydrocarbons selectivity (encompassing CH4, C2H6, C2H4, and C3H8). In contrast, composites incorporating GQDs-A, CQDs-X, or G-CQDs exhibit substantially diminished CH4 selectivity (<40.0 %). The high CH4 production rate and selectivity of C-GQDs/TiO2 can be attributed to its unique S-scheme heterojunction structure, higher reduction potential, and well-matched CO2 and H2O adsorption and activation capabilities. This study provides unique insights into the efficient photoreduction of CO2 to CH4 driven by the S-scheme heterojunction electron transfer pathway in CDs/TiO2 photocatalysts.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100116
JournalWuli Huaxue Xuebao/ Acta Physico - Chimica Sinica
Volume41
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bandgap engineering
  • Carbon dots/TiO
  • Coal-based carbon dots
  • Photocatalytic CO methanation
  • S-Scheme heterojunction

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