This article reports the development of CuO|CuBiO photocathodes stabilized by protective layers of TiO, MgO, or NiO, with Pt or MoS nanoparticles serving as co-catalysts to facilitate H evolution. Most notably, this work demonstrates the first application of MgO as a protection/passivation layer for photocathodes in a water-splitting cell. All configurations of photocathodes were studied structurally, morphologically, and photoelectrochemically revealing that CuO|CuBiO|MgO|Pt photocathodes achieve the highest stable photocurrent densities of -200 μA cm for over 3 hours with a Faradaic efficiency of ∼90%. Bias-free tandem water splitting was then performed by pairing this photocathode with a dye-sensitized TiO photoanode, producing H from neutral water without an external bias. This paper demonstrates key stability findings and proposes the use of spin-coated MgO, TiO, and NiO as feasible earth-abundant protective materials to aid in the formation of a cheap and scalable tandem water splitting system. Charge transfer dynamics have also been probed by combining spectroelectrochemistry and transient absorption spectroscopy.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11639663 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4dt02738h | DOI Listing |
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