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Highly Selective Production of Hydrogen Peroxide on Graphitic Carbon Nitride (g-C<sub>3</sub>N<sub>4</sub>) Photocatalyst Activated by Visible Light
780
Citations
52
References
2014
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringH2o2 FormationVisible LightEngineeringPhotochemistryHigh H2o2 SelectivityPhotoredox ProcessSynthetic PhotochemistryPhotocatalysisCatalysisGraphitic Carbon NitrideChemistryHydrogenPhotoelectrocatalysisWater SplittingPhotoelectrochemistryHydrogen Peroxide
Photocatalytic production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) on semiconductor catalysts with alcohol as a hydrogen source and molecular oxygen (O2) as an oxygen source is a potential method for safe H2O2 synthesis because the reaction can be carried out without the use of explosive H2/O2 mixed gases. Early reported photocatalytic systems, however, produce H2O2 with significantly low selectivity (∼1%). We found that visible light irradiation (λ > 420 nm) of graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4), a polymeric semiconductor, in an alcohol/water mixture with O2 efficiently produces H2O2 with very high selectivity (∼90%). Raman spectroscopy and electron spin resonance analysis revealed that the high H2O2 selectivity is due to the efficient formation of 1,4-endoperoxide species on the g-C3N4 surface. This suppresses one-electron reduction of O2 (superoxide radical formation), resulting in selective promotion of two-electron reduction of O2 (H2O2 formation).
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