Abstract

Enhancing the CO2 mass transfer and proton supply in the photocatalytic reduction of CO2 with H2O into CH3OH (PRC-M), while avoiding the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), remains a challenge. Herein, we propose an approach to control the surface coverage of CO2 and H2O by modifying interfacial wettability, which is achieved by modulating the core-shell structure to expose either hydrophobic melamine-resorcinol-formaldehyde (MRF) or hydrophilic NiAl-layered double hydroxides (NAL). Characterizations reveal that an insufficient proton supply leads to the production of competing CO, while excessive coverage of H2O results in undesired HER. The NAL-MRF integrates hydrophobic and hydrophilic interfaces, contributing to the CO2 mass transfer and H2O adsorption, respectively. This combination forms a microreactor that facilitates the triphase photocatalysis of CO2, H2O, and catalyst, allowing for high local concentrations of both *CO and *H without competing binding sites. Importantly, the formation of covalent bonds and a Z-type heterojunction between hydrophilic NAL and hydrophobic MRF layers accelerates the charge separation. Furthermore, the density functional theory results indicate that the NAL linking promotes the continuous hydrogenation of *CO. As a result, an enhanced CH3OH yield of 31.41 μmol g-1 h-1, with selectivity of 93.62%, is achieved without hole scavengers or precious metals.

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