Abstract

Hydrogen peroxide is one of the 100 most commonly used chemical reagents. Sunlight-driven two-electron reduction of O2 (2e- ORR) in pure water was a promising H2O2 photosynthesis route. Some covalent organic polymers (COPs) have been demonstrated as effective sacrificial agent-free photocatalysts for H2O2 photosynthesis, while more COPs are poorly active. In this present work, a simple thioether-modification strategy for covalent aromatic polyimides (CAPs) was developed to obtain high-performance sacrificial agent-free photocatalysts. During solvothermal synthesis of CAP polymers in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solvent at higher temperature (180 °C), thioether groups resulting from thermal decomposition of DMSO were grafted on dianhydride blocks of CAP polymers (S-CAPs). This enabled less active CAPs to become high active S-CAPs photocatalyst. The H2O2 production rate over the optimized S-CAPs reached 2240 μmol·h−1·g−1 without using any additional sacrificial agents, among the best photocatalysts for H2O2 photosynthesis. The thioether groups grafting on S-CAP frameworks were found to efficiently enhance visible light absorption and facilitate the separation of photogenerated electron (−) and hole (+) pairs during photosynthesis. It not only provided an impressive sacrificial agent-free photocatalyst for H2O2 photosynthesis, but also demonstrated a novel post-modification method to gain high-performance COP-based photocatalyst.

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