Photocatalytic hydrogen generation
over semiconductor photocatalysts
has attracted considerable attention over the past few decades. This
experiment is designed for sophomore- and higher-level undergraduates
who are in the majors of materials chemistry, analytical chemistry,
catalysis, or chemical engineering. In this experiment, CdS nanoparticles
and nanosheets were first fabricated with a one-step direct-precipitation
reaction and a two-step precipitation–ion-exchange reaction,
respectively, and then used as photocatalysts for visible-light
hydrogen evolution from water, in the presence of noble-metal Pt nanoparticles
as in situ cocatalysts and sodium sulfide and sulfite (Na2S/Na2SO3) as sacrificial reagents. A gas chromatograph
with a thermal-conductivity detector (GC-TCD) was used to quantitatively
monitor the produced hydrogen gas. This interdisciplinary experiment
is expected to give students an introduction to nanomaterial synthesis,
the general process of photocatalytic hydrogen generation, and the
principles and use of instruments. Upon the completion of the experiment,
students understand how chemistry can be utilized for renewable-energy
applications.