Surface Photovoltage Measurements on a Particle Tandem Photocatalyst for Overall Water Splitting

2018 
Surface photovoltage spectroscopy (SPS) is used to measure the photopotential across a Ru–SrTiO3:Rh/BiVO4 particle tandem overall water splitting photocatalyst. The tandem is synthesized from Ru-modified SrTiO3:Rh nanocrystals and BiVO4 microcrystals by electrostatic assembly followed by thermal annealing. It splits water into H2 and O2 with an apparent quantum efficiency of 1.29% at 435 nm and a solar to hydrogen conversion efficiency of 0.028%. According to SPS, a photovoltage develops above 2.20 eV, the effective band gap of the tandem, and reaches its maximal value of −2.45 V at 435 nm (2.44 mW cm–2), which corresponds to 96% of the theoretical limit of the photocatalyst film on the fluorine-doped tin-oxide-coated glass (FTO) substrate. Charge separation is 82% reversible with 18% of charge carriers being trapped in defect states. The unusually strong light intensity dependence of the photovoltage (1.16 V per decade) is attributed to depletion layer changes inside of the BiVO4 microcrystals. These fin...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    58
    References
    51
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []