Metal-organic framework membranes with single-atomic centers for photocatalytic CO2 and O2 reduction

Yu Chen Hao, Li Wei Chen, Jiani Li, Yu Guo, Xin Su, Miao Shu, Qinghua Zhang, Wen Yan Gao, Siwu Li, Zi Long Yu, Lin Gu, Xiao Feng, An Xiang Yin*, Rui Si*, Ya Wen Zhang, Bo Wang*, Chun Hua Yan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

193 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The demand for sustainable energy has motivated the development of artificial photosynthesis. Yet the catalyst and reaction interface designs for directly fixing permanent gases (e.g. CO2, O2, N2) into liquid fuels are still challenged by slow mass transfer and sluggish catalytic kinetics at the gas-liquid-solid boundary. Here, we report that gas-permeable metal-organic framework (MOF) membranes can modify the electronic structures and catalytic properties of metal single-atoms (SAs) to promote the diffusion, activation, and reduction of gas molecules (e.g. CO2, O2) and produce liquid fuels under visible light and mild conditions. With Ir SAs as active centers, the defect-engineered MOF (e.g. activated NH2-UiO-66) particles can reduce CO2 to HCOOH with an apparent quantum efficiency (AQE) of 2.51% at 420 nm on the gas-liquid-solid reaction interface. With promoted gas diffusion at the porous gas-solid interfaces, the gas-permeable SA/MOF membranes can directly convert humid CO2 gas into HCOOH with a near-unity selectivity and a significantly increased AQE of 15.76% at 420 nm. A similar strategy can be applied to the photocatalytic O2-to-H2O2 conversions, suggesting the wide applicability of our catalyst and reaction interface designs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2682
JournalNature Communications
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021

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