Abstract

This work provides an engineering guide to constructing active sites on TiO2 with the surface organometallic chemistry of nickelocene for unveiling the molecular nature of so-called “p–n heterojunction”-induced visible-light photocatalysis. H2 evolution was used as a model reaction to evaluate the photocatalytic properties of Ni/TiO2 materials containing different Ni-oxo species, which are prepared by three methods. Ni nuclearity-dependent H2 evolution was shown by comparison of H2 production rates over such Ni/TiO2 photocatalysts. Detailed characterizations clearly revealed the triple role of atomically isolated Ni species as light-harvesting, electron-trapping, and hydrogen-evolving sites in the photocatalytic reaction. The TiONi molecular junctions formed at the NiO–TiO2 interface perform the function of p–n heterojunctions and create visible light absorption and photocatalysis. It was well established that visible light photocatalysis follows a physical mechanism of metal-to-metal charge transfer in TiONi linkages severing as visible-light chromophores. Hydrogen gas is reduced and evolved at oxygen vacancies of the TiO2 surface.

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