Journal of Power Sources | 2019

A general strategy for the preparation of semiconductor-oxide-nanowire photoanodes

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Semiconductor photoelectrodes for photoelectrochemical water splitting are at the heart of the area of renewable energy. Among various semiconductors as photoelectrode materials, metal oxide nanowires have attracted exceptional attention due to their favorable band-edge positions, wide distribution of bandgaps, low cost, and outstanding stability. In this study, we develop a general strategy for the preparation of semiconductor-oxide-nanowire photoanodes. Various metal oxide nanowires are grown directly from and on the metal or alloy substrates by thermal oxidation at ultra-low pressure using the corresponding metal or alloy foil as substrates. These metal oxide nanowires and their underlying conductive substrates are used directly as integrated photoanodes, which effectively avoids the detachment of the active light-harvesting materials from the substrates during the photoelectrochemical test. For example, a water photo-oxidation current density of the iron oxide photoanode reaches 0.71\u202fmA/cm2 over a period of 20\u202fh under 100\u202fmW\u202fcm−2 illumination at the potential of 1.23\u202fV versus the reversible hydrogen electrode. The successful preparation of these semiconductor-oxide-nanowire photoanodes have important implications for further development of photoelectrodes and highly efficient solar water-splitting devices.

Volume 438
Pages 226952
DOI 10.1016/J.JPOWSOUR.2019.226952
Language English
Journal Journal of Power Sources

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