Copper(II) oxide featuring a narrow bandgap and low toxicity has been frequently applied in the visible-light-driven photocatalytic hydrogen evolution, but it suffers from large intrinsic overpotential and low water adsorption capacity. Herein, we report a self-templated strategy for the preparation of carbon-doped CuO hollow spheres (C-CuO HSs) through thermal transformation of a hierarchical MOF. The hierarchical Cu-MOFs not only act as a template to form interior voids during the thermal transformation, but also serve as precursors to dope C atoms into the CuO lattice. The as-synthesized C-CuO HSs exhibits remarkable photocatalytic performance with a H2 evolution rate of 67.3 mmol/g/h and the apparent quantum efficiency of 25.3 % at 520 nm in the present of eosin-Y photosensitizer. The high performance of C-CuO HSs is attributed to the hierarchical porous structure and modulated electronic structure of CuO by C-doping with well exposed reactive sites, high water adsorption capability, and low water reduction reaction barrier. The results presented in this work might shed light on the design of high-performance photocatalysts for various energy-related applications.
Keywords: carbon doping; copper oxide; hollow structure; metal-organic frameworks; photocatalytic H2 production.
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