Abstract

Exploring cheap and efficient hybrid catalysts offers exciting opportunities for enhancing the performance of photocatalysts in the green organic synthesis field. Herein, a facile and effective approach is designed for the synthesis of a sandwich-structured hybrid in which NiCo bimetallic nanoparticles are embedded in the tip of nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes (N-CNTs) grafted on both sides of a nitrogen deficient C3N4 (Nv-C3N4) nanosheet for photodehydrogenative coupling reactions. Such a brand-new type of sandwich-structured hybrid comprises Nv-C3N4 nanosheets and surrounding N-CNTs embedded with NiCo nanoparticles at their tips. Remarkably, the resultant hybrid exhibits integrated functionalities, abundant active sites, enhanced visible light absorption, and excellent interfacial charge transfer ability. As a result, the optimized NiCo@N-CNTs@Nv-C3N4 photocatalyst shows significantly improved photodehydrogenative coupling performance of amines to imines compared to the control single-metal-based catalysts (Ni@N-CNTs@Nv-C3N4 and Co@N-CNTs@Nv-C3N4). The mechanistic investigation through experimental and computational study demonstrates that, compared with single-metal-based hybrids, the NiCo bimetallic hybrid exhibits stronger amine adsorption and weaker photogenerated hydrogen atom adsorption, thus promoting the dehydrogenative activation of primary amines and fast generation of imines. This work presents a promising insight for designing and preparing efficient photocatalysts to trigger organic synthesis in high yields.

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