Advanced Energy & Sustainability Research (Dec 2024)
Synthesis of Doped g‐C3N4 Photonic Crystals for Enhanced Light‐Driven Hydrogen Production from Catalytic Water‐Splitting
Abstract
Dopants are frequently used to improve graphitic carbon nitride (gCN) photoactivity. As a doping source, phosphomolybdic acid (PMA) can activate doping sites inside the gCN lattice, resulting in 2D Mo:P‐gCN porous material. However, the gradual loading of the PMA fraction has no systematic improvement in the Mo:P‐gCN photoactivity. For improving the optoelectronic properties of Mo:P‐gCN, its textural geometry is a controllable parameter that can provide enhanced photonic properties, achievable by shaping its morphology through a crystalline template structure, namely, photonic crystals (PCs). Herein, a doped PC material is made of Mo:P‐gCN and PCs and labeled as Mo:P‐gCN/PCs. The impact of PCs is highlighted in the structural, electronic, and optical performances of Mo:P‐gCN. A well‐defined 3D crystalline network is evidenced by microscopic measurements (scanning electron microscopy, AFM, focused ion beam). Mo:P‐gCN/PCs shows a hydrogen production rate (750 μmol g−1 h−1) one time higher than Mo:P‐gCN and 6 times higher than pure gCN. The synthesis strategy proposed in this work leads simultaneously to the Mo:P codoping effect provided by PMA and the slow photon effect due to the PC structure, offering a novel strategy to improve the gCN photoactivity by simultaneously applying polyoxometalates as modifiers and polystyrene opals as templates.
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