1. Introduction
Compounds with tetragonal ZrCuSiAs type structure were widely studied as promising high temperature superconductors [
1]. Beyond that, these materials have interesting properties with respect to thermoelectric performance, transparent semiconducting behavior, or optical applications [
2,
3,
4,
5]. However, due to the high melting point of precursors, most of the reported ZrCuSiAs quaternary chalcogenides compounds are synthesized by time-consuming or high temperature process, such as solid state reaction [
6,
7] and flux technique [
8,
9,
10]. Vacuum or inert atmosphere are usually necessary to preventing cuprous and chalcogenides from oxidation. Analogous processes are extensively applied in chalcopyrite phase ternary or quaternary compounds synthesis [
11,
12,
13]. Moreover, severe condition, such as high temperature and long reaction time, inevitably leads to the growth of crystal along with the difficulty of controlling the morphology of specimens [
14]. In the wet-chemical process, the solubility and stability of precursors metal ions in solvent are two important factors that perplex the fabrication of this series of compounds [
15,
16].
BiCuSO, one of oxysulfides in ZrCuSiAs family, has the same crystal structure and band structure with BiCuSeO and LnCuOS (Ln = La~Lu), the latter two are investigated as promising thermoelectric (TE) materials [
17]. Due to the oxidizing of chalcogenides and the cuprous, synthesis of these compounds remains a challenge. Richard synthesized BiCuSO by a two-step solid state reaction in vacuum using Cu
3BiS
3 as precursor. [
18] The whole process needs longer than 120 h. David Berardan synthesized BiCuSO with stoichiometric mixture of Bi
2O
3, Bi
2S
3, Bi, Cu, and Cu
2S sealed in silica tubes under vacuum, and a two-step thermal treatment at 350 °C for 15 h and 600 °C for another one week was needed [
19]. Synthesis of these oxychalcogenides through wet chemical approaches is also challenging. Ultra-high pressures or temperature and extremely long reaction time were usually required. For example, Bi
2O
2S was synthesized in 10% NaOH solution under 98 MPa pressure for three days at 400 °C [
14]. Cu
+ achieves a maximum molar solubility about 10
−4 at 200 °C along with the disproportionation of Cu
+ ions into Cu
2+ ions and copper metal. To achieve a solubility of 2%~5%, which is a necessary condition to generate a high yield, elevated temperature was employed as the most facilitated method for bismuth compound hydrothermal synthesis [
15,
16]. Polycrystalline BiCuSO with a size of ∼2 µm was fabricated through hydrothermal process using Bi
2O
3, Cu
2O, and dehydrated Na
2S as precursors at 250 °C [
16]. Similarly, pure BiCuSeO can been synthesized at 250 °C with pressure of 20 atm to promote the dissolution of oxide precursors and stabilize monovalent copper. Hydrazine hydrate was used to prevent the oxidation of dianionic selenium [
15]. Among the strategies of cuprous chalcogenides synthesis, air-free, or the inert condition and high temperature are usually employed, which limited its applications. BiCuSO synthesis under mild condition was considered difficult due to the valence state change of Cu in reaction and high melting point of metal sulfide/oxide precursors.
In this work, we present a novel mild wet-chemical method for BiCuSO nanostructures synthesize with convenient morphology control. Water-soluble copper and various bismuth salts are used under ambient atmosphere without high temperature or inert condition. BiCuSO nanosheet with thickness of 4.5 nm is obtained at room temperature. Experiment results indicate that the as-synthesized BiCuSO exhibit efficient photocatalytic activities under ultraviolet, visible, and near infrared light irradiation. Investigations of BiCuSO nanocrystal formation mechanism may contribute to a new understanding of the medium effect in wet chemistry for cuprous based materials fabrication.
3. Results and Discussion
Alkali hydroxide was proposed inapposite for multielements cuprous chalcogenides synthesis [
15]. In the present work, the single-phase of samples were obtained conveniently using Bi
2O
3 and Cu(NO
3)
2 as precursors in NaOH aqueous solution when hydrothermal treated at 180 °C for 12 h. The powder XRD results showed all diffraction peaks could be indexed as BiCuSO according to JCPDS 47-0277 and indicated a tetragonal unit cell (
Figure 1a,b). The cationic Bi/Cu ratio of was determined to be 1.00/0.98 by Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (AAS). Control experiments with various NaOH concentration were also carried out. Without NaOH, the mixture was approximately neutral and the final sediments could be indexed as Bi
2O
2CO
3 (
Figure S1, Supplementary Materials), scarcely any BiCuSO was detected. Increasing the NaOH concentration to 0.17 mol/L, a small amount of BiCuSO emerged mingling with Bi
2O
2CO
3. It seems that the existent of NaOH contributes to the formation of BiCuSO. Analogous phenomenon was also observed when other bismuth precursors, for example Bi
2CuO
4, Bi(NO
3)
3, or BiCl
3, were used (
Figure S2, Supplementary Materials). Nevertheless, due to the strong hydrolysis of bismuth compounds such as Bi(NO
3)
3 and BiCl
3 in aqueous, acidic species decreased the pH value and neutralized alkali species, that necessitated the increasing amount of additive alkali hydroxide. Bismuth subcarbonate and wittichenite were major impurities when the alkali hydroxide amount was insufficient. Exceed alkali hydroxide concentration showed no hindering effect on BiCuSO formation according to the experimental result. Entirely pure BiCuSO were obtained in more concentrated aqueous alkali hydroxide (
Figure S2a–c, Supplementary Materials). Thiourea are usually employed as the sulfur source in copper chalcogenide compound fabrication [
21]. In this work, Cu
2+ is reduced to Cu
+, which then binds with S released from thiourea. Moreover, Cu
+ also bridges the amino groups of thiourea to form complexes [
22,
23]. The chelation structure promotes the dissolution and stabilization of cuprous during reaction. Employing appropriate temperature and alkali hydroxide concentration in hydrothermal process, CuSO
4, Cu(NO
3)
2, CuCl
2, and Cu(CH
3COO)
2 could be used to fabricated BiCuSO without any extra dehydration treatments or reducing treatments (
Figure S2d, Supplementary Materials).
The above experimental results indicate that fabrication of BiCuSO crystal through hydrothermal process was achievable at low temperature. The divalent Cu
2+ in the precursor was reduced to Cu
+ in the presence of alkali hydroxide and thiourea. Using Bi
2O
3 and Cu(NO
3)
2 as metal precursors, fabrication was carried out at different hydrothermal temperatures range from 90 °C to 200 °C for 12 h to get a deeper insight over grow mechanism. As shown in
Figure 2, all the specimens were indexed as BiCuSO with ignorable impurities. The crystallization degree, implied by the sharpness of the diffraction peaks, increased when the treat temperatures were higher than 120 °C, which was attributed to the well growth of BiCuSO at higher temperatures.
Direct morphology evolution was checked by SEM measurements (
Figure 3). BiCuSO crystal possessed sheets or plates-like appearances after hydrothermal treatments. The specimen obtained at 90 °C was porous and rough due to the incomplete development of crystal. In range of 120~160 °C, sheets-like BiCuSO were obtained, with the thickness of dozens of nanometers and several hundred nanometers of lateral size. Higher temperatures led to larger sheets-like crystal. When the treating temperatures were higher than 160 °C, polyhedron microcrystalline was obtained. High temperatures promoted the dissolve of tiny crystal and integrity of larger polyhedron, which is deemed as the ripen mechanism. Precipitates dissolve into mother solution and form oversaturated solution during hydrothermal process. Nucleation and re-crystallization occurred and lead to the growth of specific morphologies and the developments of larger crystal. This is the normal strategy for morphology controlling in the hydrothermal process.
Previously, bismuth and its compounds were believed insoluble in alkali hydroxide solution due to strong hydrolysis [
24,
25], and fabrication of bismuth compounds at low temperature was not easy to realize. In the present work, Bi
2O
3 and even the hydrolysis products of other bismuth precursors were easily transferred at extraordinary low temperature. The temperature dependence of the solubility seems inoperative for this strategy. This assumption was further eliminated through fabrication at room temperature (25 °C). Amazingly, without any employment of inert condition or other reductant, BiCuSO was synthesized facilely by stirring the above mentioned mixture under ambient atmosphere for 24 h (using BiCl
3, Bi(NO
3)
3 or Bi
2O
3 as bismuth source) (
Figure S3, Supplementary Materials). The broaden diffraction peaks of XRD patterns implied much smaller crystal size. Morphology characterization revealed that BiCuSO was irregular hemming nanosheets with thickness less than 10 nm (
Figure 3g). Further measurements were preceded using AFM. With several micrometers of in-plane size, BiCuSO nanosheets possessed a thickness thinner than ~4.5 nm (
Figure 3h,i). The decrease of geometry size is favor of the increase of surface area. The nitrogen absorption-desorption measurements (
Figure S4, Supplementary Materials) revealed that hydrothermal prepared BiCuSO nanocrystals presented an impressive average specific surface area, and lower treat temperature facilitated the increase of specific surface area. The specimen fabricated at room temperature possessed the largest specific surface area (28.166 m
2/g), that was 2.8 times of that fabricated at 200 °C (9.997 m
2/g). Thus, a one-pot synthesis strategy of BiCuSO nanosheets under ambient atmosphere at room temperature was developed.
To get deeper understanding of the formation mechanism of BiCuSO crystal in hydrothermal process, the mixtures of precursors were treated at 180 °C for various time respectively. BiCuSO was detected after short time treated at 180 °C. XRD (
Figure S5, Supplementary Materials) patterns showed that, after 30 min, the product could be indexed as BiCuSO and bits of impurity was unreacted Bi
2O
3. Prolonging the reaction time, impurity disappeared and resulted in pure BiCuSO. SEM images clearly revealed the morphology evolution of BiCuSO at different stages of the hydrothermal process (
Figure 4). At the early stage of growth (~30 min), nanosheets with thicknesses of about 15 nm formed. Meanwhile, segmental nanoparticles about dozens of nanometers in diameters coexisted and adjoined to nanosheets. However, the precursor Bi
2O
3 is granular and the diameters are about hundreds nanometers (
Figure S6a,b, Supplementary Materials). It is suspected that raw precursors transferred to nanosheets and smaller granules at the very beginning of hydrothermal reaction. That indicated BiCuSO sheets grow dynamical easily at more mild condition than reported. Prolonging the reaction time led to the growth of BiCuSO nanosheets, especially the increase of thickness from about 15 nm to 20 nm, 41 nm and 182 nm when terminating the hydrothermal process at 1 h, 2 h, and 6 h. Inerratic polyhedron crystals possessing smooth facets and edges were obtained after 12 h treatment, with the thickness of about 250 nm.
Although the exact chemical mechanism is still unclear, the growth of BiCuSO crystal in this one-pot synthesis strategy can be illustrated as follow: bismuth hydrolysed in NaOH aqueous solution till chemical stabilization was reached in the form of oxy-compound such as BiONO
3, BiOCl [
26,
27] or bismuth oxide. Afterwards, with the assistant of NaOH and thiourea, dissolution of bismuth oxy-compound and reduction of bivalent copper ion occured simultaneously, along with the nucleation of BiCuSO nanocrystal at the very beginning when all the raw materials were mixed. The layered crystal structure favored the growth of BiCuSO nanosheets. Nanosheet-like BiCuSO grew up into polyhedron crystal at last.
Different from previous hydrothermal method, copper salts were universally applicable in this process. Reduction reaction caused by thiourea was responsible for formation of Cu
+ in BiCuSO. And no extra procedures were needed for the stabilization of Cu
+ or the inhibition disproportionation of Cu
+. Due to low-energy of Bi 6
p, S 3
p, and O 2
p states close in energy to the top of the valence band, theoretical investigation showed that the band gap of BiCuSO was ~1.22 eV [
28]. Basic properties (dielectric constant, effective mass of photo-generated electron and hole, charge carrier’s mobility) investigated through DFT calculation showed that BiCuSO possesses all the fundamental properties needed for photovoltaic application, and a global efficiency of 10% may be achieved if appropriate solar cells structure was constructed elaborately [
28]. As shown in
Figure 5, BiCuSO displayed strong absorption capacity in UV, visible and near infrared light according to diffusion reflection spectrum, and experimental band-gap was 1.08 eV (
Figure 5a). Samples fabricated at different temperature revealed the same full-spectrum photo-absorption properties (
Figure S6c, Supplementary Materials). That means the fabrication condition have no effect on the band gap of different morphology BiCuSO. Photoelectrochemical (PEC) test was performed on electrochemical station under various incident light. BiCuSO demonstrated broad photoconversion capacity, and steep photoelectric responses were got (
Figure 5b). Photodegrading of organic dye is usually employed to examine the photocatalytic activity of materials. BiCuSO synthesized at room temperature with the largest specific surface area was investigated. As shown in
Figure 5c, the CR solution could be completely degraded in 120 min under visible light irradiation, and around 95.2% of CR was degraded under UV light irradiation in 180 min. Amazingly, BiCuSO nanosheets showed impressive NIR light activity for the photocatalytic degradation of CR, around 78.7% of CR was degraded within 180 min (
Figure 5c). The unchanged XRD patterns of BiCuSO nanosheets before and after photocatalysis (
Figure S7a, Supplementary Materials) indicated the stability of the photocatalyst.
Figure S7b shows the fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of CR powder, BiCuSO nanosheets after adsorption in CR aqueous solution, and that of BiCuSO after completing photocatalytic process. Characteristic peaks of CR powder at 640.33 cm
−1 and 1178.23 cm
−1 are identical to that on BiCuSO after adsorption. However, after a whole photocatalytic process, peaks attributed to CR disappeared. The concentration decrease of the CR is not caused by adsorption only. The stability of BiCuSO nanosheets was examined through repeated photooxidation experiments (
Figure S7) After four successive cycles, BiCuSO nanosheets degraded around 72% of the CR within 180 min under NIR irradiation and around 91% within 120 min under visible irradiation, which is similar to the activity for the first cycle (78.7% and 98.8 degradation in 120 min). The results again indicated the photocatalytic activity of BiCuSO in broadband spectrum.
The effective separations of photo induced holes and electrons is one of the key factors influence the photocatalytic efficiency [
29,
30]. According to our previous study, the different charge mobility and the effective mass of carriers play important roles in the full spectrum light response ability of BiCuSO nanosheets [
20]. However, there was another possibility that the defects can trap holes and electrons and act as reaction sites, which increased the light conversion ability [
31,
32]. High-resolution XPS was performed to investigate the chemical characteristics of BiCuSO (
Figure 6). By comparing the XPS of precursor Bi
2CuO
4, which contained Bi
3+ and Cu
2+ simultaneously, obvious changes of element chemical states were revealed. Peaks located at 159.11 and 164.22 eV were ascribed to Bi4f
7/2 and Bi4f
5/2 in both BiCuSO and Bi
2CuO
4. For divalent copper ions in Bi
2CuO
4, peaks of Cu2p
3/2 and Cu2p
1/2 orbitals located at 954.12 and 934.27 eV were observed respectively, with satellite peaks of higher binding energy. After solution process, monovalent copper characteristics arose with two peaks located at 952.12 and 932.22 eV. Oxygen atom was supposed bonding with bismuth atom in Bi–O layer through hybridization. However, splitting spin-orbit located at 531.17 and 529.38 eV were noticed, and could be ascribed to O2s with △
Ep(4f
5/2 − 4f
7/2) = 1.79 eV. The splitting feature could be attribute to the interlayer interaction between Bi-O layer and Cu-S layer [
33]. That could be furtherly revealed by the peaks located at 232.65 eV which implied the characteristics of sulfate besides the feature of sulfide (peak at 225.7 eV). Overall, the bonding energies of the elements is consistent with the BiCuSO, confirming the formation of pure BiCuSO phase and the reduction of copper through solution process. The XPS results showed that there was no valance change or large amounts of obvious defects in BiCuSO samples. Thus high photocatalytic efficiency was not attributed to these two factors. BiCuOS comprises (Cu
2S
2)
2− layers alternately stacked with (Bi
2O
2)
2+ along the c axis. Meanwhile, the top of the valence band (VB) is mainly composed of S3
p and Cu 3
d, and Bi 6
p states make major contributions to the bottom of the conduction band (CB). The holes and electrons induced by incident light the irradiation of light were able to migrate in different layers, which was another advantage of the photocatalytic process. The mechanism of the photocatalytic process is illustrated in
Figure 7.