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Enhanced solar-to-chemical conversion of seawater to H2O2 via defect-rich sulphur-doped poly (heptazine imide) photocatalystsopen access

Authors
Kuila, AneekMishra, PriyankaLee, Sae YounBhuvanendran, NarayanamoorthyPichiah, SaravananShahid, Muhammad KashifMishra, Nirmalendu SekharChand, Sasmita
Issue Date
Mar-2026
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Keywords
Defect engineering; H2O2 production; Seawater photocatalysis; Singlet oxygen generation; Sulphur-doped poly (heptazine imide)
Citation
Materials Today Sustainability, v.33, pp 1 - 13
Pages
13
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Materials Today Sustainability
Volume
33
Start Page
1
End Page
13
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63742
DOI
10.1016/j.mtsust.2026.101318
ISSN
2589-2347
2589-2347
Abstract
Sustainable on-site hydrogen peroxide (H<inf>2</inf>O<inf>2</inf>) production from oxygen and water using visible light is an appealing method for decentralized water treatment and green oxidation chemistry. However, it often faces challenges due to weak O<inf>2</inf> activation and rapid charge recombination in carbon nitride photocatalysts. In this study, we report a sulphur-functionalized poly (heptazine imide) (S-PHI) made through KCl-assisted polymerization. The controlled addition of different atoms and changes to the framework improve crystallinity, stacking order, and defect chemistry. XRD and vibrational spectroscopy confirm the creation of a heptazine-imide network with strain-induced structural changes. XPS shows C–S bonding without oxidized sulphur species present. S-PHI shows improved visible-light absorption (Eg ∼ 2.64 eV; LHE ∼91% up to 440 nm), strong photoluminescence quenching, a slightly longer carrier lifetime (∼10.48 ns), a larger electrochemically active surface area (Cdl: 61.5 mF cm−2), lower interfacial charge-transfer resistance, and a more negative flat-band potential (−1.62 V), which supports oxygen reduction. With low-power 405 nm LED light and ethanol, S-PHI produces 16,400 μmol g−1 h−1 H<inf>2</inf>O<inf>2</inf>, increasing to 38,142 μmol g−1 h−1 in untreated seawater with O<inf>2</inf> bubbling. The apparent quantum yields reach up to 45.1%, and the SCC efficiency is 0.31%. Rotating-disk analysis (n ∼ 2.29) and scavenger tests indicate a mainly two-electron O<inf>2</inf> reduction pathway, with an extra 1O<inf>2</inf>-mediated contribution from defect states and photosensitized pathways. This work showcases defect-engineered PHI as a strong and scalable option for solar-driven H<inf>2</inf>O<inf>2</inf> production in real saline environments. © © 2026. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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