Synthesis of Pore‐Wall‐Modified Stable COF/TiO2 Heterostructures via Site‐Specific Nucleation for an Enhanced Photoreduction of Carbon Dioxide

Author:

Putta Rangappa Akkammagari1,Praveen Kumar Dharani1,Do Khai H.1,Wang Jinming1,Zhang Yuexing2,Kim Tae Kyu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Yonsei University Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

2. College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Dezhou University Dezhou 253023 China

Abstract

AbstractConstructing stable heterostructures with appropriate active site architectures in covalent organic frameworks (COFs) can improve the active site accessibility and facilitate charge transfer, thereby increasing the catalytic efficiency. Herein, a pore‐wall modification strategy is proposed to achieve regularly arranged TiO2 nanodots (≈1.82 nm) in the pores of COFs via site‐specific nucleation. The site‐specific nucleation strategy stabilizes the TiO2 nanodots as well as enables the controlled growth of TiO2 throughout the COFs’ matrix. In a typical process, the pore wall is modified and site‐specific nucleation is induced between the metal precursors and the organic walls of the COFs through a careful ligand selection, and the strongly bonded metal precursors drive the confined growth of ultrasmall TiO2 nanodots during the subsequent hydrolysis. This will result in remarkably improved surface reactions, owing to the superior catalytic activity of TiO2 nanodots functionalized to COFs through strong NTiO bonds. Furthermore, density functional theory studies reveal that pore‐wall modification is beneficial for inducing strong interactions between the COF and TiO2 and results in a large energy transfer via the NTiO bonds. This work highlights the feasibility of developing stable COF and metal oxide based heterostructures via organic wall modifications to produce carbon fuels by artificial photosynthesis.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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