posted on 2020-03-10, 11:33authored byFrancisco Yarur Villanueva, John Manioudakis, Rafik Naccache, Marek B. Majewski
Visible-light
photosensitization of metal oxides to create heterostructures for
the conversion of solar to chemical energy is a promising approach
to produce solar fuels and other valuable chemicals. Carbon dots have
recently been considered as suitable candidates to sensitize wide-band-gap
metal oxide semiconductors due to their low cost and tunable optical
properties. While photocatalytic systems using carbon dots as sensitizers
have been reported, transformations involving the production of value-added
chemicals as well as the electron transfer mechanisms underpinning
photocatalysis within such heterostructures remain underexplored.
Here, we report the sensitization of zinc oxide nanowires with carbon
dots for the α-heteroarylation of 1-phenylpyrrolidine with 2-chlorobenzothiazole
under visible-light illumination at room temperature. The carbon dots
improve the light absorption of the nanowires in the visible region
of the spectrum affording the use of white light to drive catalysis.
From optical spectroscopy and electrochemistry investigations of the
resulting nanohybrid material, the photocatalytic properties are explained
by the band alignment at the zinc oxide–carbon dot junction
where a series of single-electron transfers create the necessary potential
to oxidize 1-phenylpyrrolidine. The resulting cascade of electron
transfers into and from the carbon dots drives the α-heteroarylation
to a 97% yield after 24 h.