Abstract
Sluggish surface reaction is a critical factor that strongly governs the efficiency of photocatalytic solar fuel production, particularly in CO2-to- ethanol photoconversion. Here, inspired by the principles underlying enzyme catalytic proficiency and specificity, we report a biomimetic photocatalyst that affords superior CO2-to- ethanol photoreduction efficiency (5.5 millimoles gram-1 hour-1 in average with 98.2% selectivity) distinctly surpassing the state of the art. The key is to create a class of catalytic pocket, which contains spatially organized NH2 Cu-Se(- Zn) multiple functionalities at close range, over ZnSe colloidal quantum wells. Such structure offers a platform to mimic the concerted cooperation between the active site and surrounding secondary/outer coordination spheres in enzyme catalysis. This is manifested by the chemical adsorption and activation of CO2 via a bent geometry, favorable stabilization toward a variety of important intermediates, promotion of multielectron/proton transfer processes, etc. These results highlight the potential of incorporating enzyme-like features into the design of photocatalysts to overcome the challenges in CO2 reduction.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | eadq2791 |
| Journal | Science advances |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 47 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 22 Nov 2024 |
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