94 research outputs found

    Photocurrents from photosystem II in a metal oxide hybrid system: electron transfer pathways

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    We have investigated the nature of the photocurrent generated by Photosystem II (PSII), the water oxidizing enzyme, isolated from Thermosynechococcus elongatus, when immobilized on nanostructured titanium dioxide on an indium tin oxide electrode (TiO2/ITO). We investigated the properties of the photocurrent from PSII when immobilized as a monolayer versus multilayers, in the presence and absence of an inhibitor that binds to the site of the exchangeable quinone (QB) and in the presence and absence of exogenous mobile electron carriers (mediators). The findings indicate that electron transfer occurs from the first quinone (QA) directly to the electrode surface but that the electron transfer through the nanostructured metal oxide is the rate-limiting step. Redox mediators enhance the photocurrent by taking electrons from the nanostructured semiconductor surface to the ITO electrode surface not from PSII. This is demonstrated by photocurrent enhancement using a mediator incapable of accepting electrons from PSII. This model for electron transfer also explains anomalies reported in the literature using similar and related systems. The slow rate of the electron transfer step in the TiO2 is due to the energy level of electron injection into the semiconducting material being below the conduction band. This limits the usefulness of the present hybrid electrode. Strategies to overcome this kinetic limitation are discussed

    Photo-electrochemical Hydrogen Sulfide Splitting using SnIV-doped Hematite Photo-anodes

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    © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.Spray-pyrolysed SnIV-doped α-Fe2O3 photo-anodes were used for photo-assisted splitting of HS- ions in alkaline aqueous solutions, producing polysulfide (Sn2 -) ions together with hydrogen at the cathode. Subsequent aerial oxidation of polysulfide could be used to produce elemental sulfur. At an applied electrode potential of 1.07 V (RHE) and an irradiance of 5.6 kW m- 2, stable photocurrents of ca. 11 A m- 2 (2 × 10- 3 A W- 1) were recorded over 75 h, polysulfide concentrations increasing linearly with time. Despite being predicted thermodynamically to form iron sulfide(s) in sulfide solutions, such photo-anodes appeared to be stable. In comparison with conventional water splitting under alkaline conditions, the coupled processes of hydrogen sulfide ion oxidation and water reduction had a lower energy requirement

    Kinetics of photoelectrochemical oxidation of methanol on hematite photoanodes

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    The kinetics of photoelectrochemical (PEC) oxidation of methanol, as a model organic substrate, on α-Fe2O3 photoanodes are studied using photoinduced absorption spectroscopy and transient photocurrent measurements. Methanol is oxidized on α-Fe2O3 to formaldehyde with near unity Faradaic efficiency. A rate law analysis under quasi-steady-state conditions of PEC methanol oxidation indicates that rate of reaction is second order in the density of surface holes on hematite and independent of the applied potential. Analogous data on anatase TiO2 photoanodes indicate similar second-order kinetics for methanol oxidation with a second-order rate constant 2 orders of magnitude higher than that on α-Fe2O3. Kinetic isotope effect studies determine that the rate constant for methanol oxidation on α-Fe2O3 is retarded ∼20-fold by H/D substitution. Employing these data, we propose a mechanism for methanol oxidation under 1 sun irradiation on these metal oxide surfaces and discuss the implications for the efficient PEC methanol oxidation to formaldehyde and concomitant hydrogen evolution

    Rate law analysis of water oxidation and hole scavenging on a BiVO4 photoanode

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    Spectroelectrochemical studies employing pulsed LED irradiation are used to investigate the kinetics of water oxidation on undoped dense bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) photoanodes under conditions of photoelectrochemical water oxidation and compare to those obtained for oxidation of a simple redox couple. These measurements are employed to determine the quasi-steady-state densities of surface-accumulated holes, ps, and correlate these with photocurrent density as a function of light intensity, allowing a rate law analysis of the water oxidation mechanism. The reaction order in surface hole density is found to be first order for ps 1 nm–2. The effective turnover frequency of each surface hole is estimated to be 14 s–1 at AM 1.5 conditions. Using a single-electron redox couple, potassium ferrocyanide, as the hole scavenger, only the first-order reaction is observed, with a higher rate constant than that for water oxidation. These results are discussed in terms of catalysis by BiVO4 and implications for material design strategies for efficient water oxidation

    Water Oxidation Kinetics of Accumulated Holes on the Surface of a TiO2 Photoanode: A Rate Law Analysis

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    It has been more than 40 years since Fujishima and Honda demonstrated water splitting using TiO2, yet there is still no clear mechanism by which surface holes on TiO2 oxidize water. In this paper, we use a range of complementary techniques to study this reaction that provide a unique insight into the reaction mechanism. Using transient photocurrent and transient absorption spectroscopy, we measure both the kinetics of electron extraction (t50% ≈ 200 μs, 1.5VRHE) and the kinetics of hole oxidation of water (t50% ≈ 100 ms, 1.5VRHE) as a function of applied potential, demonstrating the water oxidation by TiO2 holes is the kinetic bottleneck in this water-splitting system. Photoinduced absorption spectroscopy measurements under 5 s LED irradiation are used to monitor the accumulation of surface TiO2 holes under conditions of photoelectrochemical water oxidation. Under these conditions, we find that the surface density of these holes increases nonlinearly with photocurrent density. In alkali (pH 13.6), this corresponded to a rate law for water oxidation that is third order with respect to surface hole density, with a rate constant kWO = 22 ± 2 nm4·s–1. Under neutral (pH = 6.7) and acidic (pH = 0.6) conditions, the rate law was second order with respect to surface hole density, indicative of a change in reaction mechanism. Although a change in reaction order was observed, the rate of reaction did not change significantly over the wide pH range examined (with TOFs per surface hole in the region of 20–25 s–1 at ∼1 sun irradiance). This showed that the rate-limiting step does not involve OH– nucleophilic attack and demonstrated the versatility of TiO2 as an active water oxidation photocatalyst over a wide range of pH

    Hydrogen-doped Brookite TiO2 Nanobullets Array as a Novel Photoanode for Efficient Solar Water Splitting

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    As a representative photocatalyst for photoelectrochemical solar water splitting, TiO2 has been intensively studied but most researches have focused on the rutile and anatsase phases because brookite, another important crystalline polymorph of TiO2, rarely exists in nature and is difficult to synthesize. In this work, hydrogen doped brookite (H:brookite) nanobullet arrays were synthesized via a well-designed solution reaction for the first time. H:brookite shows highly improved PEC properties with excellent stability, enhanced photocurrent, and significantly high Faradaic efficiency for overall solar water splitting. To support the experimental data, ab initio density functional theory calculations were also conducted. At the interstitial doping site that has minimum formation energy, the hydrogen atoms act as shallow donors and exist as H+. which has the minimum formation energy among three states of hydrogen (H+. H0, and H-). The calculated density of states of H:brookite shows a narrowed bandgap and an increased electron density compared to the pristine brookite. The combined experimental and theoretical results provide frameworks for the exploration of the PEC properties of doped brookite and extend our knowledge regarding the undiscovered properties of brookite of TiO2.ope

    Water oxidation at hematite photoelectrodes: the role of surface states

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    Hematite (α-Fe2O3) constitutes one of the most promising semiconductor materials for the conversion of sunlight into chemical fuels by water splitting. Its inherent drawbacks related to the long penetration depth of light and poor charge carrier conductivity are being progressively overcome by employing nanostructuring strategies and improved catalysts. However, the physical–chemical mechanisms responsible for the photoelectrochemical performance of this material (J(V) response) are still poorly understood. In the present study we prepared thin film hematite electrodes by atomic layer deposition to study the photoelectrochemical properties of this material under water-splitting conditions. We employed impedance spectroscopy to determine the main steps involved in photocurrent production at different conditions of voltage, light intensity, and electrolyte pH. A general physical model is proposed, which includes the existence of a surface state at the semiconductor/liquid interface where holes accumulate. The strong correlation between the charging of this state with the charge transfer resistance and the photocurrent onset provides new evidence of the accumulation of holes in surface states at the semiconductor/electrolyte interface, which are responsible for water oxidation. The charging of this surface state under illumination is also related to the shift of the measured flat-band potential. These findings demonstrate the utility of impedance spectroscopy in investigations of hematite electrodes to provide key parameters of photoelectrodes with a relatively simple measurement

    Harnessing Infrared Photons for Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen Generation. A PbS Quantum Dot Based "Quasi-Artificial Leaf"

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    [EN] Hydrogen generation by using quantum dot (QD) based heterostructures has emerged as a promising strategy to develop artificial photosynthesis devices. In the present study, we sensitize mesoporous TiO2 electrodes with in-situ-deposited PbS/CdS QDs, aiming at harvesting light in both the visible and the near-infrared for hydrogen generation. This heterostructure exhibits a remarkable photocurrent of 6 mA.cm(-2), leading to 60 mL.cm(-2).day(-1) hydrogen generation. Most importantly, confirmation of the contribution of infrared photons to H-2 generation was provided by the incident-photon-to-current-efficiency (IPCE), and the integrated current was in excellent agreement with that obtained through cyclic voltammetry. The main electronic processes (accumulation, transport, and recombination) were identified by impedance spectroscopy, which appears as a simple and reliable methodology to evaluate the limiting factors of these photoelectrodes. On the basis of this TiO2/PbS/CdS heterostructrure, a "quasi-artificial leaf' has been developed, which has proven to produce hydrogen under simulated solar illumination at (4.30 +/- 0.25) mL.cm(-2).day(-1).We acknowledge support by projects from Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain (Consolider HOPE CSD2007-00007, MAT2010-19827), Generalitat Valenciana (PROMETEO/2009/058 and Project ISIC/2012/008 "Institute of Nanotechnologies for Clean Energies"), and Fundacio Bancaixa (P1.1B2011-50). S.G. acknowledges support by MINECO of Spain under the Ramon y Cajal programme. The SCIC of the University Jaume I de Castello is also acknowledged for the gas analysis measurements. C.S. acknowledges the POSDRU/89/1.5/S/58852 Project "Postdoctoral programme for training scientific researchers", co-financed by the European Social Fund within the Sectorial Operational Program Human Resources Development 2007-2013. We want to acknowledge Prof. J. Bisquert for the fruitful discussions related to this manuscript.Trevisan, R.; Rodenas, P.; González-Pedro, V.; Sima, C.; Sánchez, RS.; Barea, EM.; Mora-Sero, I.... (2013). Harnessing Infrared Photons for Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen Generation. A PbS Quantum Dot Based "Quasi-Artificial Leaf". Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. 4(1):141-146. https://doi.org/10.1021/jz301890mS1411464

    Etude de faisabilité - Amélioration de la sécurité des épandeurs de fumier

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    [Departement_IRSTEA]Ecotechnologies [TR1_IRSTEA]INSPIREDans le cadre d'une volonté de modification de la norme harmonisée EN NF 690, le Ministère de l'Alimentation, de l'Agriculture et de la Pêche a confié au Cemagref une étude de faisabilité quant à l'amélioration de la sécurité des épandeurs de fumier et notamment en phase de nettoyage. Cette étude a été réalisée sur un laps de temps très court correspondant aux deux mois séparant la date de signature de la convention et la date de restitution des résultats y figurant. Ce rapport est une restitution des travaux réalisés. Il comporte: - une étude des caractéristiques et du fonctionnement des épandeurs de fumier; - une analyse de l'accidentologie liée à l'utilisation de ces machines; - une étude plus particulière de la phase de nettoyage de ces équipements; - des propositions de solutions techniques visant à améliorer la sécurité des opérateurs à l'occasion de cette activit
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