Switching water splitting photoredox preference by geometric modulation of charge consumption sites in Bi4TaO8Cl single crystals
Abstract
Solar-driven catalysis represents a significant route for solar fuel synthesis, but its efficiency is severely restricted by rapid charge recombination and sluggish reaction kinetics. Facet junctions, formed by co-exposing anisotropic facets with matchable band structures, emerge as a promising strategy for achieving spatial separation of photogenerated charges on the surface of single-crystalline catalysts, while the facet-dependent reactivity among redox reactions remains unexplored. Herein, we extend the function of facet junctions to switching the water splitting photoredox preference by using layered Bi4TaO8Cl single crystals as a model. The exposure ratio of oxidative {001} front facets to reductive {110} lateral facets of Bi4TaO8Cl can be continuously controlled by a flux-mediated geometric modulation method, allowing this facet junction to regulate the redox-site distribution. When increasing the {001}/{110} facets ratio, the water splitting preference switches decisively from proton-reduction dominance (H2 yield: 50.1 µmol h−1; O2 yield: 13.6 µmol h−1) to water-oxidation dominance (H2 yield: 11.5 µmol h−1; O2 yield: 36.9 µmol h−1), presenting strict facet reactivity dependence. This work provides a new perspective for photocatalyst design, emphasizing that managing the inventory of surface redox sites is as important as optimizing charge separation, while also offering a generalizable methodology to tailor catalytic preference for redox reactions.

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