Efficient hydrogen production by selective alcohol photoreforming on plasmonic photocatalyst comprising sandwiched Au nanodisks and TiO2

2019 
Abstract A nanocomposite comprising gold nanodisks (Au NDs) and titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) nanophases sandwiched between zeolite nanosheets was fabricated for hydrogen production by plasmonic photocatalytic reforming of methanol. The inter-sheet space between zeolite nanosheets served as nanoconfinement for forming the edge-attached domains of Au NDs/TiO 2 . Benefiting from the anisotropic shape of Au NDs and their edge attachment with TiO 2 , the nanocomposite exhibited superior photoactivity for visible light (>400 nm)-driven photoreforming of methanol and the hydrogen production rate was ˜ 24 times higher than that of the benchmark Au@P25 photocatalyst. Moreover, experimental results suggest that zeolite nanosheets effectively gated the access to the surface of Au NDs and allowed only methanol but not higher alcohols to react to produce hydrogen. Gradual deactivation was observed during methanol photoreforming, a phenomenon shown to be attributed to the chemisorbed CO accumulated on Au in the absence of oxygen.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    39
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []