AI Article Synopsis

  • BiVO4 is recognized as a leading semiconductor for photoanodes used in photoelectrochemical water oxidation, but it struggles to reach its full photocurrent potential at low voltages due to limited charge transport and trade-offs between light absorption and charge separation efficiency.
  • This study examines BiVO4 coated on Sb-doped SnO2 nanorod arrays, achieving a light absorption and charge separation efficiency product of about 51% at 0.6 V, which is one of the highest reported efficiencies for this type of configuration.
  • The findings suggest that Sb:SnO2 is a better core material than WO3 for BiVO4 photoanodes, and enhancing performance can be achieved by combining Sb:Sn

Article Abstract

BiVO4 has become the top-performing semiconductor among photoanodes for photoelectrochemical water oxidation. However, BiVO4 photoanodes are still limited to a fraction of the theoretically possible photocurrent at low applied voltages because of modest charge transport properties and a trade-off between light absorption and charge separation efficiencies. Here, we investigate photoanodes composed of thin layers of BiVO4 coated onto Sb-doped SnO2 (Sb:SnO2) nanorod-arrays (Sb:SnO2/BiVO4 NRAs) and demonstrate a high value for the product of light absorption and charge separation efficiencies (ηabs × ηsep) of ∼51% at an applied voltage of 0.6 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode, as determined by integration of the quantum efficiency over the standard AM 1.5G spectrum. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of the highest ηabs × ηsep efficiencies achieved to date at this voltage for nanowire-core/BiVO4-shell photoanodes. Moreover, although WO3 has recently been extensively studied as a core nanowire material for core/shell BiVO4 photoanodes, the Sb:SnO2/BiVO4 NRAs generate larger photocurrents, especially at low applied voltages. In addition, we present control experiments on planar Sb:SnO2/BiVO4 and WO3/BiVO4 heterojunctions, which indicate that Sb:SnO2 is more favorable as a core material. These results indicate that integration of Sb:SnO2 nanorod cores with other successful strategies such as doping and coating with oxygen evolution catalysts can move the performance of BiVO4 and related semiconductors closer to their theoretical potential.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b05200DOI Listing

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