Abstract

Nitrogen fixation reaction via photocatalysis offers a green and promising strategy for renewable NH3 synthesis, and catalysts with high-efficiency photocatalytic properties are essential to the process. Herein, we demonstrate a W-doped Sb2OS2 bimetal oxysulfide catalyst (labeled as SbWOS) with abundant oxygen vacancies, heterovalent metal states, and hydrophilic surfaces for nitrogen photoreduction to ammonia. The SbWOS-3 with suitable W-doping exhibited excellent nitrogen fixation activity of 408.08 μmol·g-1·h-1 and an apparent quantum efficiency (AQE) of 1.88% at 420 nm and a solar-to-ammonia (STA) conversion efficiency of 0.082% in pure water under AM1.5G light irradiation. The W-doping not only transforms hydrophobic Sb2OS2 into a hydrophilic catalyst, making it easier for H2O molecules adsorbed on the SbWOS surface and catalyzed into protons, but also endows the SbWOS catalyst with rich oxygen vacancies, acting as the active sites for trapping and activating the N2 molecule, and for trapping and activating H2O to produce the protons for the N2 photocatalytic reduction reaction. The hydrazine drives the SbWOS catalyst with the heterovalent metal states, which acts as the photogenerate electrons quickly hopping between W5+ and W6+ to transfer for the N2 reduction reaction. This study provides a feasible scheme for applying oxygen vacancy defects, heterovalent metal states, and surface hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic wetting engineering in bimetal oxysulfide for N2 photoreduction to ammonia.

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