Boosted photocatalytic water splitting over a direct Z-scheme CdTe/C2N van der Waals heterojunction: a first-principles insight into photocatalytic activity
Abstract
The quest for sustainable and clean energy sources has led to significant research into photocatalytic water splitting, a process that converts solar energy into hydrogen fuel. This study demonstrates constructing a high-performance CdTe/C2N van der Waals heterojunction for solar-driven water splitting hydrogen evolution. The proposed CdTe/C2N heterojunction, investigated using first-principles calculations, integrates favorable structural stability and features a direct bandgap of 1.51 eV. The separation of photogenerated carriers is effectively facilitated by the built-in electric field oriented from CdTe to C2N. The Gibbs free energy change (ΔG) for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is found to be −0.11 eV, which is significantly closer to zero than that of the individual monolayers, thereby enabling near-ideal reaction kinetics. For the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), sufficient potential is provided by photogenerated holes in C2N under illumination to overcome the energy barrier, ensuring spontaneous water splitting. Additionally, the enhanced visible light absorption, elevated electron mobility, and suppressed high energy carrier recombination via the Z-scheme mechanism make the heterojunction achieve a solar-to-hydrogen (STH) conversion efficiency of 10.04%, surpassing the industrial threshold of 10%. Therefore, this work presents a promising approach to achieving clean energy technologies through advanced photocatalysts.