Publication | Open Access
Tailoring of electronic and surface structures boosts exciton-triggering photocatalysis for singlet oxygen generation
137
Citations
28
References
2021
Year
Arising from reduced dielectric screening, excitonic effects should be taken into account in ultrathin two-dimensional photocatalysts, and a significant challenge is achieving nontrivial excitonic regulation. However, the effect of structural modification on the regulation of the excitonic aspect is at a comparatively early stage. Herein, we report unusual effects of surface substitutional doping with Pt on electronic and surface characteristics of atomically thin layers of Bi<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>Br, thereby enhancing the propensity to generate <sup>1</sup>O<sub>2</sub> Electronically, the introduced Pt impurity states with a lower energy level can trap photoinduced singlet excitons, thus reducing the singlet-triplet energy gap by ∼48% and effectively facilitating the intersystem crossing process for efficient triplet excitons yield. Superficially, the chemisorption state of O<sub>2</sub> causes the changes in the magnetic moment (i.e., spin state) of O<sub>2</sub> through electron-mediated triplet energy transfer, resulting a spontaneous spin-flip process and highly specific <sup>1</sup>O<sub>2</sub> generation. These traits exemplify the opportunities that the surface engineering provides a unique strategy for excitonic regulation and will stimulate more research on exciton-triggering photocatalysis for solar energy conversion.
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