‘One-pot’ engineering of 0D carbon-based inorganic nanoarchitectonics for boosting multitasking catalytic activity
Use este enlace para citar
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/38584
A non ser que se indique outra cousa, a licenza do ítem descríbese como Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International CC BY-NC 4.0
Coleccións
Metadatos
Mostrar o rexistro completo do ítemTítulo
‘One-pot’ engineering of 0D carbon-based inorganic nanoarchitectonics for boosting multitasking catalytic activityAutor(es)
Data
2024Cita bibliográfica
Hou, H., Muñoz, J., Gómez, I. J., Romero, N., Sala, X., & García-Antón, J. (2024). ‘One-pot’ engineering of 0D carbon-based inorganic nanoarchitectonics for boosting multitasking catalytic activity. Materials Today Chemistry, 37. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.MTCHEM.2024.102021
Resumo
[Abstract] Easy-to-make nanostructured materials that exhibit multitasking activity —while reducing the use of hazardous solvents throughout its architectural design— is a must to advance in the so-called Industry 4.0. Herein, a simple and eco-friendly ‘one-pot’ functionalization approach has been devised for synthesizing 0D carbon-based inorganic nanoarchitectonics made of carbon dots (CDs, as core carbon source) carrying two different inorganic building blocks, viz. quantum dots (CdSe@ZnS–QDs) and metal nanoparticles (Pt–NPs). As a proof-of-principle, the multi-catalytic activity of the resulting 0D Pt/QD/CD nanoarchitectonics by means of photoelectrocatalysis and sonocatalysis has been considered and compared with the pristine CD counterpart, demonstrating its suitability for boosting pivotal catalytic tasks like i) the photoelectrogeneration of hydrogen via hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), and ii) the sonodegradation of environmental pollutants (i.e., Rhodamine B) in water. Overall, this chemical approach is general and might be tailored for architecting alternative carbon-based heterostructures to enhance alternative multi-catalytic tasks.
Palabras chave
Sonocatalysis
Photocatalysis
Carbon dots
Metal nanoparticles
Hydrogen evolution reaction
Photocatalysis
Carbon dots
Metal nanoparticles
Hydrogen evolution reaction
Versión do editor
Dereitos
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International CC BY-NC 4.0