Chinese Journal of Catalysis ›› 2020, Vol. 41 ›› Issue (1): 62-71.DOI: 10.1016/S1872-2067(19)63421-2

• Photocatalytic H2 production • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Carbon nanotube@silicon carbide coaxial heterojunction nanotubes as metal-free photocatalysts for enhanced hydrogen evolution

Xunfu Zhou, Qiongzhi Gao, Siyuan Yang, Yueping Fang   

  1. College of Materials and Energy, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, Guangdong, China
  • Received:2019-04-29 Revised:2019-06-03 Online:2020-01-18 Published:2019-10-22
  • Supported by:
    This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21673083, 21802046). The authors thank the Guangdong Provincial Science and Technology Project (2017A030313090, 2014A030310427).

Abstract: Considerable research efforts have been devoted to developing novel photocatalysts with increased performances by hybridizing inorganic nanomaterials with carbon nanotubes. In this work, one-dimensional coaxial core-shell carbon nanotubes@SiC nanotubes were successfully synthesized via in situ growth of SiC coatings on carbon nanotubes by a vapor-solid reaction between silicon vapor and carbon nanotubes. High-resolution transmission electron microscope images show that SiC and carbon nanotubes link to form a robust heterojunction with intrinsic atomic contact, which results in efficient separation of the photogenerated electron-hole pairs on SiC and electron transfer from SiC to carbon nanotubes. Compared with those of similar materials such as pure SiC nanocrystals and SiC nanotubes, the metal-free carbon nanotubes@SiC exhibits an enhanced photocatalytic activity for hydrogen evolution, which is attributed to the enhanced light absorption and the efficient interfacial charge transfer/separation brought about by their one-dimensional coaxial nanoheterostructures. Moreover, the photocatalytic stability of the metal-free carbon nanotubes@SiC was tested for over 20 h without any obvious decay.

Key words: Silicon carbide, Coaxial core-shell nanotubes, Nanoheterostructures, Charge separation, Hydrogen evolution