Boosting Photocatalytic H2 and H2O2 Evolution Enabled by Surface Non-Uniform Pyroelectric Field Derived Dielectrophoresis Effect

Youzi Zhang, Jie Su, Yijin Wang, Tong Wang, Peng Guo, Sibi Liu, Xu Xin, Shujie Zhang, Nazia Nasr, Xuanhua Li

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Photocatalytic water splitting into H2 and H2O2 presents a promising approach for converting solar energy into chemical energy. However, sluggish charge migration and unsatisfactory mass transfer restrict its activity. Herein, a photocatalytic system composed of a ZnO/Mo2C/polyacrylic acid hydrogel and carbonized wood, featuring surface non-uniform pyroelectric field-derived dielectrophoresis effect to offer a driving force for both charge and mass transfer is demonstrated. The chaotic motion of water vapor generated by the carbonized wood and the photothermal effect of Mo2C induce surface temperature oscillations and alter the polarization state of ZnO, resulting in a maximum 0.52 V surface non-uniform pyroelectric field and stimulating a 108-fold increase in dielectrophoresis force. This photocatalytic system demonstrates a 41% reduction in carrier migration barriers induced by non-uniform pyroelectric field, alongside a local enrichment of intermediates and optimized H2 diffusion via dielectrophoresis force, thus resulting in a record photocatalytic activity with H2 and H2O2 evolution rates of 755.5 and 626.3 µmol h−1, respectively. A large-area system (900 cm2) is fabricated, yielding 2.5 L of H2 and 103.05 mmol of H2O2 per day under natural sunlight. This study presents promising design criteria for creating an efficient photocatalytic system focusing on energy harvesting and the production of high-value-added products.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Energy Materials
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • charge migration
  • dielectrophoresis effect
  • large-scale photocatalytic system
  • mass transfer
  • non-uniform pyroelectric field
  • photocatalytic water splitting

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