
Sensitization of Nanocrystalline Metal Oxides with a Phosphonate-Functionalized Perylene Diimide for Photoelectrochemical Water Oxidation with a CoOx Catalyst
Author(s) -
Joel Kirner,
Richard G. Finke
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.7b05874
Subject(s) - materials science , perylene , photocurrent , photoelectrochemical cell , diimide , photochemistry , chemical engineering , catalysis , water splitting , inorganic chemistry , thin film , oxide , photocatalysis , electrolyte , nanotechnology , electrode , organic chemistry , chemistry , optoelectronics , molecule , engineering , metallurgy
A planar organic thin film composed of a perylene diimide dye (N,N'-bis(phosphonomethyl)-3,4,9,10-perylenediimide, PMPDI) with photoelectrochemically deposited cobalt oxide (CoO x ) catalyst was previously shown to photoelectrochemically oxidize water (DOI: 10.1021/am405598w). Herein, the same PMPDI dye is studied for the sensitization of different nanostructured metal oxide (nano-MO x ) films in a dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cell architecture. Dye adsorption kinetics and saturation decreases in the order TiO 2 > SnO 2 ≫ WO 3 . Despite highest initial dye loading on TiO 2 films, photocurrent with hydroquinone (H 2 Q) sacrificial reductant in pH 7 aqueous solution is much higher on SnO 2 films, likely due to a higher driving force for charge injection into the more positive conduction band energy of SnO 2 . Dyeing conditions and SnO 2 film thickness were subsequently optimized to achieve light-harvesting efficiency >99% at the λ max of the dye, and absorbed photon-to-current efficiency of 13% with H 2 Q, a 2-fold improvement over the previous thin-film architecture. A CoO x water-oxidation catalyst was photoelectrochemically deposited, allowing for photoelectrochemical water oxidation with a faradaic efficiency of 31 ± 7%, thus demonstrating the second example of a water-oxidizing, dye-sensitized photoelectrolysis cell composed entirely of earth-abundant materials. However, deposition of CoO x always results in lower photocurrent due to enhanced recombination between catalyst and photoinjected electrons in SnO 2 , as confirmed by open-circuit photovoltage measurements. Possible future studies to enhance photoanode performance are discussed, including alternative catalyst deposition strategies or structural derivatization of the perylene dye.