Enriching surface-ordered defects on WO3 for photocatalytic CO2-to-CH4 conversion by water

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Apr 30;121(18):e2319751121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2319751121. Epub 2024 Apr 25.

Abstract

Defect engineering has been widely applied in semiconductors to improve photocatalytic properties by altering the surface structures. This study is about the transformation of inactive WO3 nanosheets to a highly effective CO2-to-CH4 conversion photocatalyst by introducing surface-ordered defects in abundance. The nonstoichiometric WO3-x samples were examined by using aberration-corrected electron microscopy. Results unveil abundant surface-ordered terminations derived from the periodic {013} stacking faults with a defect density of 20.2%. The {002} surface-ordered line defects are the active sites for fixation CO2, transforming the inactive WO3 nanosheets into a highly active catalyst (CH4: O2 = 8.2: 16.7 μmol h-1). We believe that the formation of the W-O-C-W-O species is a critical step in the catalytic pathways. This work provides an atomic-level comprehension of the structural defects of catalysts for activating small molecules.

Keywords: CO2 conversion; induced polarization; photocatalysis; surface-ordered defects; unsaturated coordination.