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1D Co‐Pi Modified BiVO 4 /ZnO Junction Cascade for Efficient Photoelectrochemical Water Cleavage
Author(s) -
Moniz Savio J. A.,
Zhu Jun,
Tang Junwang
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.201301590
Subject(s) - photocurrent , materials science , optoelectronics , charge carrier , absorption (acoustics) , electron transfer , quenching (fluorescence) , energy conversion efficiency , water splitting , photochemistry , photocatalysis , catalysis , optics , chemistry , fluorescence , biochemistry , physics , composite material
The most important factors dominating solar hydrogen synthesis efficiency include light absorption, charge separation and transport, and surface chemical reactions (charge utilization). In order to tackle these factors, an ordered 1D junction cascade photoelectrode for water splitting, grown via a simple low‐cost solution‐based process and consisting of nanoparticulate BiVO 4 on 1D ZnO rods with cobalt phosphate (Co‐Pi) on the surface is synthesized. Flat‐band measurements reveal the feasibility of charge transfer from BiVO 4 to ZnO, supported by PL measurements and photocurrent observation in the presence of an efficient hole scavenger, which demonstrate that quenching of luminescence of BiVO 4 and enhanced current are caused by electron transfer from BiVO 4 to ZnO. A dramatic cathodic shift in onset potential under both visible and full arc irradiation, coupled with a 12‐fold increase in photocurrent (ca. 3 mA cm ‐2 ) are observed compared to BiVO 4 , resulting in ≈47% IPCE at 410 nm (4% for BiVO 4 ) with high solar energy conversion efficiency (0.88%). The reasons for these enhancements stem from enhanced light absorption and trapping, in situ rectifying electron transfer from BiVO 4 to ZnO, hole transfer to Co‐Pi for water oxidation, and facilitating electron transport along 1D ZnO.