Abstract

Photocatalytic hydrogen evolution has become an alternative tool for green fuel production from water. Nevertheless, the surface texture and vast bandgap energies are still open issues before realizing the visible light application. This study yields mesoporous hexagonal ZnO nanoparticles by calcinating the obtained zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF-8). In addition, the ZIF-8 is combined with a Co2+ source to yield 1.0–4.0 wt% Co3O4/ZnO p-n nanoheterojunctions by the same method. The produced heterojunctions formed 35 nm of Co3O4 nanoparticles on mesoporous ZnO exteriors and exhibited very high surface areas of 1571–1691 m2 g−1. The addition of Co3O4 to ZnO bared more exhaustive harvesting of visible light and reduced the bandgap from 3.45 to 2.76 eV. The photocatalytic hydrogen evolution over derived Co3O4/ZnO was performed in 10% aqueous glycerol solution and hexachloroplatinic acid as hole scavenger and cocatalyst precursor, correspondingly. The 3% Co3O4/ZnO verified superior H2 evolution of 2241 μmol g−1h−1, an 1834-times greater than the pure ZnO. The adjusted dose of this novel photocatalyst showed estimable reusability for five successive runs. The resourceful light-harvesting, minimizing bandgap and suppressing recombination explained the enhanced H2 evolution in the occurrence of Pt cocatalyst.

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