Abstract

Metal-isolated clusters (MICs) physically confined on photoactive materials are of great interest in the field of photosynthesis of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Despite recent important endeavors, weak confinement of MICs in the reported photocatalytic systems leads to their low catalytic activity and stability. Herein, we report a new strategy of fluorinated covalent organic frameworks (COFs) to strongly confine Pd ICs for greatly boosting the photocatalytic activity and stability of H2O2 photosynthesis. Both experimental and theoretical results reveal that strong electronegative fluorine can increase the metal-support interaction and optimize the d-band center of Pd ICs, thus significantly enhancing the stability and activity of photocatalytic H2O2. An optimal TAPT-TFPA COFs@Pd ICs photocatalyst delivers a stable H2O2 yield rate of 2143 μmol h-1 g-1. Most importantly, the as-made TAPT-TFPA COFs@Pd ICs exhibit high catalytic stability over 100 h, which is the best among the reported materials.

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