Salt‐melt synthesis of poly(heptazine imide) in binary alkali metal bromides for enhanced visible‐light photocatalytic hydrogen production

Poly(heptazine imide) (PHI), a semicrystalline version of carbon nitride photocatalyst based on heptazine units, has gained significant attention for solar H2 production benefiting from its advantages including molecular synthetic versatility, excellent physicochemical stability and suitable energy...

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Published inInterdisciplinary materials (Print) Vol. 3; no. 3; pp. 389 - 399
Main Authors Jin, Yaxuan, Zheng, Dandan, Fang, Zhongpu, Pan, Zhiming, Wang, Sibo, Hou, Yidong, Savateev, Oleksandr, Zhang, Yongfan, Zhang, Guigang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Wuhan John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.05.2024
Wiley
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Summary:Poly(heptazine imide) (PHI), a semicrystalline version of carbon nitride photocatalyst based on heptazine units, has gained significant attention for solar H2 production benefiting from its advantages including molecular synthetic versatility, excellent physicochemical stability and suitable energy band structure to capture visible photons. Typically, PHI is obtained in salt‐melt synthesis in the presence of alkali metal chlorides. Herein, we examined the role of binary alkali metal bromides (LiBr/NaBr) with diverse compositions and melting points to rationally modulate the polymerization process, structure, and properties of PHI. Solid characterizations revealed that semicrystalline PHI with a condensed π‐conjugated system and rapid charge separation rates were obtained in the presence of LiBr/NaBr. Accordingly, the apparent quantum yield of hydrogen using the optimized PHI reaches up to 62.3% at 420 nm. The density functional theory calculation shows that the dehydrogenation of the ethylene glycol has a lower energy barrier than the dehydrogenation of the other alcohols from the thermodynamic point of view. This study holds great promise for rational modulation of the structure and properties of conjugated polymeric materials. A new poly(heptazine imide) was synthesized via salt‐melt synthesis in binary alkali metal bromides with accelerated carrier transfer and decreased internal structural defects for photocatalytic hydrogen production.
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ISSN:2767-441X
2767-4401
2767-441X
DOI:10.1002/idm2.12159