Abstract

Recently, metal-organic framework (MOF)-based photocatalysts for an efficient CO2 reduction reaction have drawn wide attention in multidisciplinary fields and sustainable chemistry. In this work, a series of Cu2+-doped two-dimensional Ti-based MOFs were fabricated by a facile in situ solvothermal method. Cu2+ ions were doped in equal proportions and uniformly dispersed in the crystal structure of the MOF matrix. Interestingly, the doping content of Cu2+ ions and the photocatalytic performance displayed an obvious volcanic relationship, the medium-concentration Cu2+-doped sample (T1-2Cu) held the greatest activity with 100% carbonaceous product (CH4 and CO) formation, and the CH4 production rate was 3.7 μmol g-1 h-1 with 93% electron selectivity. The band structure, local electronic structure, carrier separation kinetics, and CO2 adsorption studies demonstrated that the excellent photocatalytic activity of T1-2Cu benefited from the appropriate amount of Cu2+ ion doping: (1) a doping amount of 2 atom % optimized the conduction band position of the MOF substrate and endowed T1-2Cu with strong reduction potential in thermodynamics, (2) doping Cu2+ ions tuned the local electronic environment around titanium oxide clusters and optimized the generation, separation, and migration processes of photoinduced carriers, and (3) the introduction of Cu2+ ions also provided more accessible active sites and more probabilities for the adsorption and activation of CO2 reactants.

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