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Journal article

Faradaic efficiency of O2 evolution on metal nanoparticle sensitized hematite photoanodes

From

Chalmers University of Technology1

Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark2

Surface Physics and Catalysis, Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark3

Center for Individual Nanoparticle Functionality, Centers, Technical University of Denmark4

Functionalization of transition metal oxides using metallic nanoparticles is an interesting route towards efficient photoelectrochemical hydrogen production via water splitting. Although an enhanced photocurrent in photoanodes upon functionalization with metallic nanostructures has been observed in several studies, to the best of our knowledge no measurements of the Faradaic efficiency (FE) of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) have been reported for such systems.

This work characterizes the FE on a model system consisting of ultra-thin films of hematite (Fe2O3) sensitized with Ti/Au nanodisks. Compared to bare hematite references, sensitized samples showed significantly enhanced photocurrents as well as O-2 evolution. Experimental evidence suggests that the observed enhancement was not due to photocatalytic activity of the nanodisks.

The FE has been determined to be 100%, within the experimental errors, for both sensitized and reference samples. Also, this work demonstrates that the sensitized samples were stable for at least 16 hours photocurrent testing. The concepts shown in this work are generally applicable to any situation in which a semiconductor has its water splitting performance enhanced by metallic nanostructures.

Language: English
Publisher: The Royal Society of Chemistry
Year: 2014
Pages: 1271-1275
ISSN: 14639084 and 14639076
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp54288b
ORCIDs: Seger, Brian and Chorkendorff, Ib

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