Tailoring the Porosity in Iron Phosphosulfide Nanosheets to Improve the Performance of Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution

Jian Zhang, Fang Feng, Yong Pu, Xing'ao Li, Cher Hon Lau, Wei Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Scopus citations

Abstract

Metal sulfide photocatalysts are typically required during water splitting to produce hydrogen. However, the rapid recombination of photogenerated electron–hole pairs in these highly unstable photocatalysts has restricted hydrogen production to small-scale batch reactions. In this work, porous transition-metal thiophosphites were used to enable continuous long-term hydrogen production through photocatalysis. A wide bandgap (2.04 eV) was essential for generating hydrogen at a rate of 305.6 μmol h−1 g−1, 180 % faster than nonporous FePS3 nanosheets. More importantly, the high in-plane stiffness of these approximately 7 nm thick porous FePS3 nanosheets ensured structural stability during 56 h of continuous photocatalysis reactions. The reaction results with D2O instead of H2O indicated that hydrogen mainly came from H2O. Furthermore, a sacrificial reagent (triethylamine) was photodegraded into diethylamine and acetaldehyde through a monoelectronic oxidation process, as indicated by HPLC and LC–MS. This synthesis strategy reported for FePS3 porous nanosheets paves a new pathway for designing other dianion-based inorganic nanocrystals for hydrogen energy applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2651-2659
Number of pages9
JournalChemSusChem
Volume12
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 Jun 2019

Keywords

  • FePS
  • hydrogen evolution
  • photocatalysis
  • porous nanosheets
  • stability

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Tailoring the Porosity in Iron Phosphosulfide Nanosheets to Improve the Performance of Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this