Photocatalytic reduction of CO2 in pure H2O media to produce chemicals presents an appealing avenue for simultaneously alleviating energy and environmental crises. However, the rapid recombination of photogenerated charge carriers presents a significant challenge in this promising field. Heterojunction engineering has emerged as an effective approach to address this dilemma. Here, by decorating 2D NiAl-layered double hydroxides (NAL) onto bismuth oxybromide (BOB), we have created a S-scheme heterojunction (N1B1 composite). This catalyst affords CO2-to-CO yields of 102.30 μmol g−1 with a selectivity of 100 %. Ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) and in-situ irradiated X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (ISI-XPS) reveal that charge transfer occurs efficiently from BOB to 2D-NAL upon light irradiation. The designed N1B1 heterojunction achieves 7.3-fold and 2.1-fold increase in the internal electric field strength compared to bare 2D-NAL and BOB, respectively, which should be accountable for the improved charge migration. Additionally, pulsed chemisorption and in-situ Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform Spectroscopy (DRIFTS) show the presence of multiple carbonate intermediates with activated OCO bonds upon N1B1 composite, with *CO2− being identified as the most crucial species for CO production.
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