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姚朝阳课题组 | ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION

发布人:    发布时间:2024/02/26   浏览次数:

Emerging Light-Harvesting Materials Based on Organic Photovoltaic D/A Heterojunctions for Efficient Photocatalytic Water Splitting


By

Guo, YX (Guo, Yaxiao) [1] ; Sun, JY (Sun, Jiayuan) [1] ; Guo, T (Guo, Tao) [1] ; Liu, Y (Liu, Yi) [1] ; Yao, ZY (Yao, Zhaoyang) [2]
(provided by Clarivate)

Source

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION

DOI

10.1002/anie.202319664

Early Access

FEB 2024

Indexed

2024-02-11

Document Type

Review; Early Access

Abstract

Photocatalytic water splitting to hydrogen is a highly promising method to meet the surging energy consumption globally through the environmentally friendly means. As the initial step before photocatalysis, harvesting photons from sunlight is crucially important, thus making the design of photosensitizers with visible even near-infrared (NIR) absorptions get more and more attentions. In the past three years, organic donor/acceptor (D/A) heterojunctions with absorptions extending to 950 nm, have emerged as the new star light-harvesting materials for photocatalytic water splitting, demonstrating exciting advantages over inorganic materials in solar light utilization, hydrogen yielding rate, etc. This Minireview firstly gives a brief discussion about the principle processes and determining factors for photocatalytic water splitting with organic photovoltaic D/A heterojunction as photosensitizers. Thereafter, the current progress is summarized in details by introducing typical and excellent D/A heterojunction-based photocatalytic systems. Finally, not only the great prospects but also the most challenging issues confronted by organic D/A heterojunctions are indicated along with a perspective on the opportunities and new directions for future material explorations.

The D/A heterojunction photosensitizers, composed of organic photovoltaic electron donors and acceptors, have been applied in photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reactions and demonstrated an exciting solar light utilization, hydrogen yielding rate, etc. The confronted challenges and possible opportunities are indicated with the aim of boosting research on organic D/A heterojunction photosensitizers further.