Abstract

Light-driven primary amine oxidation to imines integrated with H2 production presents a promising means to simultaneous production of high-value-added fine chemicals and clean fuels. Yet, the effectiveness of this strategy is generally limited by the poor charge separation of photocatalysts and uncontrolled hydrogenation of imines to secondary amines. Herein, a spatial decoupling strategy is proposed to isolate redox chemistry at distinct sites of photocatalysts, and CoP core-ZnIn2S4 shell (CoP@ZnIn2S4) coaxial nanorods are assembled as the proof-of-concept photocatalyst. Directional and ultrafast carrier separation occurs between the CoP core and the ZnIn2S4 shell, as confirmed by in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, surface photovoltage spectroscopy, and transient absorption spectroscopy analyses. Toward the photoconversion of model substrate benzylamine to N-benzylbenzaldimine, CoP@ZnIn2S4 exhibits a 48-time higher production rate and >99% selectivity when compared to ZnIn2S4 (ca. 20% selectivity), and the detailed reaction mechanism has been verified by in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy.

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