From Triazine to Heptazine: Origin of Graphitic Carbon Nitride as a Photocatalyst.
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ABSTRACT: Graphitic carbon nitride (g-CN) has emerged as a promising metal-free photocatalyst, while the catalytic mechanism for the photoinduced redox processes is still under investigation. Interestingly, this heptazine-based polymer optically behaves as a "quasi-monomer". In this work, we explore upstream from melem (the heptazine monomer) to the triazine-based melamine and melam and present several lines of theoretical/experimental evidence where the catalytic activity of g-CN originates from the electronic structure evolution of the C-N heterocyclic cores. Periodic density functional theory calculations reveal the strikingly different electronic structures of melem from its triazine-based counterparts. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy also provide consistent results in the structural and chemical bonding variations of these three relevant compounds. Both melam and melem were found to show stable photocatalytic activities, while the photocatalytic activity of melem is about 5.4 times higher than that of melam during the degradation of dyes under UV-visible light irradiation. In contrast to melamine and melam, the frontier electronic orbitals of the heptazine unit in melem are uniformly distributed and well complementary to each other, which further determine the terminal amines as primary reduction sites. These appealing electronic features in both the heterocyclic skeleton and the terminated functional groups can be inherited by the polymeric but quasi-monomeric g-CN, leading to its pronounced photocatalytic activity.
SUBMITTER: Liu N
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7271407 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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