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Hydroxyl-enabled dipole engineering in metal-free COFs for highly selective solar CO2-to-CO conversion

  • Northwestern Polytechnical University Xian
  • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Photocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (pCO2RR) holds considerable promise for solar-to-fuel conversion, however, simultaneously optimizing activity, selectivity, and stability in covalent organic frameworks (COFs) remains a fundamental challenge. Although metal-free COFs offer structural robustness and readily tunable CO2—interactive sites via heteroatom engineering, their charge-transport efficiency is often constrained by strong exciton binding and fast carrier recombination. Herein, a hydroxyl-functionalized porphyrin-based COF (Por-BDA-2OH) was rationally constructed, in which hydroxyl incorporation established in-plane O-H···N = C interactions, amplified the ground-state dipole moment (μg), and reinforced the internal electric field (IEF), thus accelerating photoinduced charge separation and prolonging the lifetime of photogenerated carriers. In parallel, such hydrogen-bonding interactions also strengthened CO2 adsorption/activation and broadened light harvesting. As a result, Por-BDA-2OH delivered outstanding pCO2RR performance, achieving a CO evolution rate of 91.5 μmol·h−1·g−1, superior to most reported metal-free COF photocatalysts. Overall, this work identifies hydrogen-bond-assisted dipole engineering as an effective molecular strategy to improve photoexciton separation dynamics in metal-free COFs, thereby offering a broadly applicable design principle to coordinate the intrinsic activity–selectivity–stability relationship in metal-free COF photocatalysts, with broader implications for the design of molecularly precise light-harvesting systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number126863
JournalApplied Catalysis B: Environmental
Volume394
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Oct 2026

Keywords

  • Dipole
  • Hydrogen bonding and CO adsorption/activation
  • Metal-free covalent organic frameworks
  • Photocatalytic CO reduction reaction

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