Enabling unassisted solar water splitting by iron oxide and silicon

Ji-Wook Jang(Boston College), Chun Du(Boston College), Yifan Ye(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Yongjing Lin(Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis), Xiahui Yao(Boston College), James E. Thorne(Boston College), Erik J. Liu(Boston College), G. McMahon(Boston College), Junfa Zhu(University of Science and Technology of China), Ali Javey(Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis), Jinghua Guo(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Dunwei Wang(Boston College)
Nature Communications
June 16, 2015
Cited by 504Open Access
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Abstract

Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting promises a solution to the problem of large-scale solar energy storage. However, its development has been impeded by the poor performance of photoanodes, particularly in their capability for photovoltage generation. Many examples employing photovoltaic modules to correct the deficiency for unassisted solar water splitting have been reported to-date. Here we show that, by using the prototypical photoanode material of haematite as a study tool, structural disorders on or near the surfaces are important causes of the low photovoltages. We develop a facile re-growth strategy to reduce surface disorders and as a consequence, a turn-on voltage of 0.45 V (versus reversible hydrogen electrode) is achieved. This result permits us to construct a photoelectrochemical device with a haematite photoanode and Si photocathode to split water at an overall efficiency of 0.91%, with NiFeOx and TiO2/Pt overlayers, respectively.


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