J. Mater. Sci. Technol. ›› 2025, Vol. 232: 302-312.DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2025.01.036

• Research Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

One-step ultrasonic synthesis and fs-TAS investigation of C3N4 nanosheet/thiophene-based polymer S-scheme photocatalyst for H2 production

Mian Weia, Xin Zhoub, Chang Chengc, Jianjun Zhangc, Chuanjia Jiangd,*, Bei Chenga,*   

  1. aState Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Processing, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan 430070, China;
    bDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Ordos Institute of Technology, Ordos 017000, China;
    cLaboratory of Solar Fuel, Faculty of Materials Science and Chemistry, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430078, China;
    dCollege of Environmental Science and Engineering, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, China
  • Received:2024-12-19 Revised:2025-01-23 Accepted:2025-01-25 Published:2025-10-10 Online:2025-03-11
  • Contact: * E-mail addresses: jiangcj@nankai.edu.cn (C. Jiang), chengbei2013@whut.edu.cn (B. Cheng).

Abstract: Graphitic carbon nitride is flourishing in photocatalytic hydrogen production. However, the performance of traditional carbon nitride materials is limited by their scarcity of surface reactive sites and fast recombination of photogenerated electron-hole pairs. Herein, we introduce a simple ultrasonic synthesis method that exfoliates bulk carbon nitride into nanosheets while simultaneously forming S-scheme heterojunctions with in-situ grown thiophene-based polymer through π-π interactions. The obtained carbon nitride nanosheet/polymer S-scheme heterojunction possesses abundant surface active sites and exhibits suppressed recombination of photogenerated electron-hole pairs, resulting in a hydrogen production rate approximately double that of bulk carbon nitride and a superior apparent quantum yield of 5.00 %. The S-scheme charge transfer mechanism was proven by in-situ irradiated X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and time-resolved femtosecond-transient absorption analysis clarified the charge separation and transfer dynamics. This study demonstrates that combining organic semiconductors and hypercrosslinked polymers is a promising strategy for designing highly efficient S-scheme heterojunction photocatalysts.

Key words: Hydrogen production, Ultrasonic synthesis, Polymer semiconductor, S-scheme heterojunction, Femtosecond transient absorption, spectroscopy