Ru species decoration on hierarchical Nb2O5−x modulates product selectivity for CO2 photoreduction
Abstract
Photocatalytic CO2 reduction to CH4 is a promising route to convert greenhouse gases into value-added fuels and chemicals. Nevertheless, achieving high efficiency and product selectivity remains a formidable challenge due to the inherent thermodynamic stability of CO2, the complex reaction pathways and competing intermediates. Herein, hierarchical structure Nb2O5 thistles with oxygen vacancies (Ov) and N-doping (Nb2O5−x) and Ru species-decorated Nb2O5−x (Ru-Nb2O5−x) were successfully constructed for highly selective CO2 photoreduction. Nb2O5−x achieves a high CO formation rate of 92.4 μmol g−1 h−1 with 90.4% selectivity, far beyond (≈19.6 fold) that of pristine Nb2O5. Notably, Ru-Nb2O5−x delivers a 17.0-fold higher CH4 evolution rate (165.9 μmol g−1 h−1) with a CH4 selectivity of 78.3%. Ru species (Ru0 and Ruδ+) decoration triggers a selectivity switch by altering the reaction pathway to produce CH4 instead of CO. Mechanistic studies reveal that the synergy among Ov, N-doping, and Ru sites further narrows the bandgap and modulates the electronic structure, thereby enhancing charge separation, promoting CO2 adsorption and activation, strengthening *CO binding, and further facilitating *CHxO formation through rapid proton extraction from water dissociation. These effects collectively suppress *CO desorption and promote *CO hydrogenation to CH4. The present work establishes a strategic framework for designing advanced materials with controllable selectivity in CO2 conversion.

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