Nanoporous 6H-SiC Photoanodes with a Conformal Coating of Ni–FeOOH Nanorods for Zero-Onset-Potential Water Splitting
Author(s) -
Baoying Li,
JingXin Jian,
Jianbin Chen,
Xuelian Yu,
Jianwu Sun
Publication year - 2020
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.9b17170
Subject(s) - nanoporous , materials science , nanorod , photocurrent , anodizing , conformal coating , water splitting , semiconductor , coating , optoelectronics , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , composite material , photocatalysis , catalysis , aluminium , biochemistry , chemistry , engineering
A surface-nanostructured semiconductor photoelectrode is highly desirable for photoelectrochemical (PEC) solar-to-fuel production due to its large active surface area, efficient light absorption, and significantly reduced distance for charge transport. Here, we demonstrate a facile approach to fabricate a nanoporous 6H-silicon carbide (6H-SiC) photoanode with a conformal coating of Ni-FeOOH nanorods as a water oxidation cocatalyst. Such a nanoporous photoanode shows significantly enhanced photocurrent density ( j ph ) with a zero-onset potential. A dendritic porous 6H-SiC with densely arranged holes with a size of ∼40 nm on the surface is fabricated by an anodization method, followed by the hydrothermal deposition of FeOOH nanorods and electrodeposition of NiOOH. Under an illumination of AM1.5G 100 mW/cm 2 , the Ni-FeOOH-coated nanoporous 6H-SiC photoanode exhibits an onset potential of 0 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode ( V RHE ) and a high j ph of 0.684 mA/cm 2 at 1 V RHE , which is 342 times higher than that of the Ni-FeOOH-coated planar 6H-SiC photoanode. Moreover, the nanoporous photoanode shows a maximum applied-bias-photon-to-current efficiency (ABPE) of 0.58% at a very low bias of 0.36 V RHE , distinctly outperforming the planar counterpart. The impedance measurements demonstrate that the nanoporous photoanode possesses a significantly reduced charge-transfer resistance, which explains the dramatically enhanced PEC water-splitting performance. The reported approach here can be widely used to fabricate other nanoporous semiconductors for solar energy conversion.
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