Amorphous carbon nitride with typical short-range order
arrangement
as an effective photocatalyst is worth exploring but remains a great
challenge because its disordered structure induces severe recombination
of photogenerated charge carriers. Herein, for the first time, we
demonstrate that a hierarchical amorphous carbon nitride (HACN) with
structural oxygen incorporation can be synthesized via a cyanuric
acid-assisted melem hydrothermal process, accompanied by freeze-drying
and pyrolysis. The complex composed of melem and cyanuric acid exhibiting
a unique 3D self-supporting skeleton and significant phase transformation
is responsible for the formation of an interconnected hierarchical
framework and amorphous structure for HACN. These features are beneficial
to enhance its visible light harvesting by the multiple-reflection
effect within the architecture consisting of more exposed porous nanosheets
and introducing a long band tail absorption. The well-designed morphology,
band tail state, and oxygen doping effectively inhibit rapid band-to-band
recombination of the photogenerated electrons and holes and facilitate
subsequent separation. Accordingly, the HACN catalyst exhibits exceptional
visible light (λ > 420 nm)-driven photoreduction for hydrogen
production with a rate of 82.4 μmol h–1, which
is 21.7 and 9.5 times higher than those of melem-derived carbon nitride
and crystalline nanotube carbon nitride counterparts, respectively,
and significantly surpasses those of most reported amorphous carbon
nitrides. Our controlling of rearrangement of the in situ supramolecular
self-assembly of melem oligomer using cyanuric acid directly instructs
the development of highly efficient amorphous photocatalysts for converting
solar energy into hydrogen fuel