Abstract

Defective layered bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl) exhibits excellent photocatalytic activities in water purification and environmental remediation. Herein, in situ single-molecule fluorescence microscopy is used to spatially resolve the photocatalytic heterogeneity and quantify the photoredox activities on individual structural features of BiOCl. The BiOCl nanoplates with respective dominant {001} and {010} facets (BOC-001 and BOC-010) are fabricated through tuning the pH of the solution. The corner position of BOC-001 exhibits the highest photo-oxidation turnover rate of 262.7 ± 30.8s-1µm-2, which is 2.1 and 65.7 times of those of edges and basal planes, respectively. A similar trend is also observed on BOC-010, which can be explained by the heterogeneous distribution of defects at each structure. Besides, BOC-001 shows a higher photoredox activity than BOC-010 at corners and edges. This can be attributed to the superior charge separation ability, active high-index facets of BOC-001, and its co-exposure of anisotropic facets steering the charge flow. Therefore, this work provides an effective strategy to understand the facet-dependent properties of single-crystalline materials at nanometer resolution. The quantification of site-specific photoredox activities on BiOCl nanoplates sheds more light on the design and optimization of 2D materials at the single-molecule level.

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