Abstract

Metal oxide nanosheets derived from the layered counterparts have attracted attention in various fields due to their unique structural properties. The anisotropic feature of nanosheets, having a thickness of ~1 nm and lateral dimensions ranging from several hundred nanometers to a few micrometer, is advantageous for heterogeneous photocatalysis, as the diffusion length of photogenerated carriers to the surface is shortened, leading to higher activity. It is also known that certain nanoparticulate metals or metal oxides on a semiconductor photocatalyst work as cocatalysts to promote water reduction and/or oxidation. In heterogeneous photocatalysis, the effect of cocatalyst size on the water-splitting performance had not been examined at sizes smaller than 1 nm due to the lack of an effective preparation method and a suitable photocatalyst. We have demonstrated that metal nanoclusters (such as Pt) of <1 nm in size could be deposited on the interlayer nanospace of KCa2Nb3O10 using the electrostatic attraction between a cationic metal complex and a negatively charged Ca2Nb3O10 – sheet, without the aid of any additional reagent. The material obtained exhibited 8 times greater photocatalytic activity for overall water splitting under band-gap irradiation than the previously reported analog using a RuO2 promoter. This study highlighted the superior functionality of <1 nm Pt nanoclusters for photocatalytic overall water splitting. With further modification by a ruthenium(II) photosensitizer, this material also worked as a H2 evolution photocatalyst in visible-light-driven Z-scheme water splitting, in combination with a WO3-based O2 evolution photocatalyst and a triiodide/iodide redox couple. Pt-intercalated HCa2Nb3O10 nanosheets further modified with amorphous AlO x clusters demonstrated a remarkable photocatalytic activity with a dye-based turnover number and frequency for H2 evolution of 4580 and 1960 h–1, respectively, which were by far the highest among dye-sensitized nonsacrificial photocatalytic systems ever reported.

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