Metal-free heteroatom doping of carbon nitride for enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 10:01 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Sulfur-doped carbon nitride multiplies hydrogen peroxide production by over 16 times under solar light
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Metal-free heteroatom doping modifies the stacked nanosheet structure of graphitic carbon nitride, producing disorder, partial exfoliation, and altered interlayer spacing that improve electronic and optical properties. The sulfur-doped material reaches a hydrogen peroxide production rate of 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹ and an apparent quantum yield of 8.1 percent, a 16.4-fold increase over the undoped case, while keeping more than 95 percent of its activity after five cycles. The reaction proceeds mainly through a two-electron oxygen activation pathway in which singlet oxygen and photogenerated holes dominate.
What carries the argument
Heteroatom doping of C3N4 that induces structural disorder and electronic modification to enhance charge separation and reaction selectivity
Load-bearing premise
The measured rises in hydrogen peroxide output come from the heteroatom-induced improvements in charge separation and electronic structure rather than from differences in surface area, light absorption, or other unmeasured experimental factors.
What would settle it
Repeating the experiments with doped and undoped samples that have been matched for surface area, light-absorption spectra, and verified doping concentrations would show whether the activity differences remain or vanish.
read the original abstract
The photocatalytic production of hydrogen peroxide (H$_2$O$_2$) from water is a promising strategy for solar-to-chemical energy conversion. Herein, we investigate the effect of metal-free heteroatom doping (B, O, P, and S) on the structural, electronic, and photocatalytic properties of graphitic carbon nitride (C$_3$N$_4$) for H$_2$O$_2$ production under simulated solar irradiation. While pristine C$_3$N$_4$ exhibits stacked nanosheets, doping induces disorder, partial exfoliation, and changes in interlayer spacing, confirming successful heteroatom incorporation and modification of the electronic and optical properties. Photocatalytic experiments reveal that H$_2$O$_2$ production strongly depends on the sacrificial agent, pH, and reactive-species scavengers. All doped catalysts show enhanced activity compared to pristine C$_3$N$_4$, with 9.6-, 14.8-, 11.0-, and 16.4-fold increases for B-, P-, O-, and S-doped C$_3$N$_4$, respectively. S-doped C$_3$N$_4$ achieved the highest H$_2$O$_2$ production rate of 3022.1 $\mu$mol h$^{-1}$ g$^{-1}$ and an apparent quantum yield of 8.1\%, attributed to improved charge separation and optimized selectivity. Mechanistic studies indicate that oxygen activation mainly follows a two-electron (2e$^{-}$) pathway driven by charge-carrier modulation and reactive oxygen species dynamics, with singlet oxygen and photogenerated holes playing a dominant role. In addition, S-doped C$_3$N$_4$ retained over 95\% of its activity after five cycles. These results highlight metal-free heteroatom doping as an effective strategy for sustainable photocatalytic H$_2$O$_2$ generation.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript investigates metal-free heteroatom doping (B, O, P, S) of graphitic carbon nitride (C3N4) to enhance photocatalytic H2O2 production from water under simulated solar irradiation. It reports that doping induces structural disorder, partial exfoliation, and interlayer spacing changes, leading to modified electronic and optical properties. All doped catalysts exhibit enhanced activity, with fold increases of 9.6 (B), 14.8 (P), 11.0 (O), and 16.4 (S) over pristine C3N4; S-doped C3N4 achieves the highest rate of 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹ and 8.1% apparent quantum yield, attributed to improved charge separation and a dominant 2e⁻ oxygen activation pathway involving singlet oxygen and photogenerated holes. The S-doped material retains >95% activity after five cycles.
Significance. If the activity enhancements are confirmed to arise from electronic and charge-separation effects rather than unaccounted structural variables, this would represent a useful contribution to metal-free photocatalysis for H2O2 synthesis, demonstrating a straightforward doping approach that yields high rates, good selectivity, and reasonable stability. The explicit reporting of fold improvements and cycle retention provides a clear benchmark for future work in sustainable solar-to-chemical conversion.
major comments (2)
- Abstract: The H2O2 production rates are reported only on a per-gram basis (e.g., 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹ for S-doped) without normalization to BET surface area or confirmation of comparable doping concentrations across samples. The abstract itself states that doping induces disorder, partial exfoliation, and interlayer spacing changes; these structural modifications can independently increase accessible surface area and light absorption, raising the possibility that the observed 9.6- to 16.4-fold enhancements are driven at least partly by these factors rather than solely by the claimed improvements in charge separation and electronic structure.
- Mechanistic studies section (as summarized in abstract): The assertion that oxygen activation follows a dominant two-electron (2e⁻) pathway driven by charge-carrier modulation rests on scavenger experiments, yet the abstract provides no quantitative details on scavenger specificity, the exact impact on H2O2 yields when particular species (e.g., holes or singlet oxygen) are quenched, or controls ruling out alternative 1e⁻ routes. This weakens the mechanistic attribution central to explaining the selectivity and activity ranking.
minor comments (1)
- Abstract: The dependence of activity on sacrificial agent, pH, and reactive-species scavengers is noted qualitatively but without specific numerical conditions or values; adding these details in the main text would improve reproducibility.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments on our manuscript. We have carefully reviewed the concerns regarding rate normalization and the level of detail in the mechanistic discussion. We address each point below and indicate the revisions planned for the next version of the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Abstract: The H2O2 production rates are reported only on a per-gram basis (e.g., 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹ for S-doped) without normalization to BET surface area or confirmation of comparable doping concentrations across samples. The abstract itself states that doping induces disorder, partial exfoliation, and interlayer spacing changes; these structural modifications can independently increase accessible surface area and light absorption, raising the possibility that the observed 9.6- to 16.4-fold enhancements are driven at least partly by these factors rather than solely by the claimed improvements in charge separation and electronic structure.
Authors: We agree that mass-normalized rates alone do not fully isolate electronic effects from structural ones. In the revised manuscript we will add BET surface area values for all samples (pristine and doped) and report H2O2 production rates normalized to both catalyst mass and specific surface area. We have performed XPS and CHNS elemental analysis confirming heteroatom incorporation levels of 2–5 at.% that are comparable across the B-, O-, P-, and S-doped materials; these data and the corresponding spectra will be included in the revised Supporting Information. While the abstract notes structural changes, the full text already presents PL quenching, EIS, and transient photocurrent results that demonstrate improved charge separation beyond what surface area alone would explain. We will strengthen the discussion to explicitly separate these contributions. revision: yes
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Referee: Mechanistic studies section (as summarized in abstract): The assertion that oxygen activation follows a dominant two-electron (2e⁻) pathway driven by charge-carrier modulation rests on scavenger experiments, yet the abstract provides no quantitative details on scavenger specificity, the exact impact on H2O2 yields when particular species (e.g., holes or singlet oxygen) are quenched, or controls ruling out alternative 1e⁻ routes. This weakens the mechanistic attribution central to explaining the selectivity and activity ranking.
Authors: We accept that the abstract is too concise on the scavenger data. The full manuscript already contains quantitative results from experiments using EDTA (holes), furfuryl alcohol (¹O₂), and benzoquinone (O₂•⁻), showing >70 % suppression of H2O2 yield for holes and singlet oxygen while the superoxide scavenger has minimal effect. We will revise the abstract to include these percentage reductions and add a concise summary table of scavenger effects with appropriate control experiments. EPR spectra confirming ¹O₂ generation and additional control runs that exclude significant 1e⁻ contribution will be highlighted in the revised mechanistic section. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: purely experimental performance study with direct measurements
full rationale
This paper reports experimental synthesis, characterization, and photocatalytic testing of B-, O-, P-, and S-doped C3N4 for H2O2 production. All central claims (fold increases in rate, highest value of 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹ for S-doped, 8.1% AQY, stability after five cycles) rest on measured quantities under controlled conditions rather than any derivation, equation, or prediction that reduces to its own inputs. No self-referential equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations appear in the provided text or abstract. The study is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Photocatalytic H2O2 formation proceeds via charge-carrier-mediated oxygen reduction following established two-electron or four-electron pathways.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
All doped catalysts show enhanced activity... S-doped C3N4 achieved the highest H2O2 production rate of 3022.1 μmol h⁻¹ g⁻¹... attributed to improved charge separation and optimized selectivity.
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
BET specific surface areas... 61.6, 67.3, 102.1, 78.2, and 141.5 m2 g-1... higher surface upon doping suggests a higher number of catalytic sites
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
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- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
INTRODUCTION The global energy transition is a pressing challenge in the 21st century, driven by the need to reduce carbon emissions, mitigate climate change, and develop sustainable alternatives to fossil fuels. As industries and governments shift toward cleaner energy solutions, hydrogen-based technologies have garnered significant attention due to thei...
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[2]
P. Sun, Z. Chen, J. Zhang, G. Wu, Y. Song, Z. Miao, K. Zhong, L. Huang, Z. Mo, H. Xu, Simultaneously tuning electronic reaction pathway and photoactivity of P, O modified cyano-rich carbon nitride enhances the photosynthesis of H2O2, Appl Catal B 342 (2024) 123337. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2023.123337. [16] W. Wang, R. Liu, J. Zhang, T. Kong, L. W...
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[3]
Z. Zhao, Y. Long, Y. Chen, F. Zhang, J. Ma, Phosphorus doped carbon nitride with rich nitrogen vacancy to enhance the electrocatalytic activity for nitrogen reduction reaction, Chemical Engineering Journal 430 (2022) 132682. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2021.132682. [30] M. Zuo, X. Li, Y. Liang, F. Zhao, H. Sun, C. Liu, X. Gong, P. Qin, H. Wang, Z. Wu, L...
discussion (0)
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