posted on 2015-08-05, 00:00authored byYun-Pei Zhu, Tie-Zhen Ren, Zhong-Yong Yuan
Graphitic
carbon nitride (g-C3N4) has been
deemed a promising heterogeneous metal-free catalyst for a wide range
of applications, such as solar energy utilization toward water splitting,
and its photocatalytic performance is reasonably adjustable through
tailoring its texture and its electronic and optical properties. Here
phosphorus-doped graphitic carbon nitride nanostructured flowers of
in-plane mesopores are synthesized by a co-condensation method in
the absence of any templates. The interesting structures, together
with the phosphorus doping, can promote light trapping, mass transfer,
and charge separation, enabling it to perform as a more impressive
catalyst than its pristine carbon nitride counterpart for catalytic
hydrogen evolution under visible light irradiation. The catalyst has
low cost, is environmentally friendly, and represents a potential
candidate in photoelectrochemistry.