作者
Yiwen Zhang,Dong Wu,Xiaofei Zeng,Bocheng Qiu,Qiaohong Zhu,Jinlong Zhang
摘要
Abstract Metal‐free graphitic carbon nitride has been considered as a promising candidate for hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) photosynthesis, with the advantage of low‐cost, high stability, and environmentally friendly capacity. However, such a solar‐to‐chemical conversion still suffers from limited light utilization, confined surface adsorption, and restricted reduction/oxidation reaction pathway. At this juncture, this bottleneck has been overcome through diverse modifications over carbon nitride, such as defect engineering graphitic carbon nitride with modulated physical and chemical properties, which performs satisfactory visible‐light absorption, sufficient active sites, and promotes charge transfer kinetics for artificial solar‐to‐chemical conversion. In this review, the recent advances for H 2 O 2 photosynthesis over defective graphitic carbon nitride are described, including the existing principles for H 2 O 2 formation, the factors affecting photosynthesis, the fabrication strategies toward novel materials, and the detailed pathways for H 2 O 2 formation. The functions of defects, the properties of materials, and the reaction mechanisms, and the selectivity, as well as in situ characterizations for catalyst synthesis and pathway exploration, have been summarized clearly. Finally, the advantages and shortcomings, together with the challenges and prospects, are highlighted for the development of defect engineering over carbon nitride for H 2 O 2 photosynthesis.