Water splitting via a photocatalysis-electrolysis hybrid system has been investigated as a potentially scalable and economically feasible means of producing renewable H. However, there are no reports demonstrating a scalable system for stoichiometric water splitting using an efficient and stable photocatalyst, and the key operating conditions for efficiently driving the entire system have not been established. Herein, we address the issues required to efficiently drive the entire system of a Cs, Fe, and H ion-modified WO (denoted as H-Fe-Cs-WO) photocatalyst fixed reactor combined with a polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM)-type electrolyzer. In electrochemical H production using Fe, the current density improved as the concentration of both H and Fe increased, and we determined the optimum conditions for a hybrid system using high concentrations of HClO and Fe(ClO), which differ from those reported for photocatalysis alone. No performance deterioration of the H-Fe-Cs-WO photocatalyst was observed even after light irradiation for more than 10 000 h under strong acidic conditions. The accumulated Fe ions were extremely stable and did not oxidize even when exposed to air for more than two months. As for the stepwise operation that takes advantage of the characteristics of the hybrid system, the contribution factor of the photocatalyst in the photocatalysis-electrolysis hybrid system for H evolution (CP@STH) under an applied bias was estimated to be 0.24%, which is a value comparable to that of the solar-to-chemical (STC) conversion efficiency (0.31%). The efficiency difference (0.07%) corresponds to the overpotential of the electrolytic reaction and indicates that water splitting via the photocatalysis-electrolysis hybrid system proceeds efficiently at a small overpotential of 0.06 V (∼11.6 kJ mol).
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c12781 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!