30 research outputs found
Sustained Water Oxidation by Direct Electrosynthesis of Ultrathin Organic Protection Films on Silicon
Artificial photosynthesis allows exceeding the efficiency and stability limits of natural photosynthesis. Based on the use of semiconducting absorbers, high efficiency in water photolysis has been achieved in various photoelectrode configurations. However, integrated systems are limited in their stability, and more stable half-cell electrodes use protection films prepared by laborious methods. Herein, the facile low-temperature preparation of ultrathin organic protection coatings is demonstrated. The formation is based on the catalytic properties of water oxidation catalysts toward alcohol-polymerization reactions, which results in the formation of hitherto unknown protection layers on silicon. The interfacial layers are generated via iodine-mediated electro-reductive polymerization of ethanol, concomitantly forming during electrophoretic transport of RuO_2 onto silicon supports. Reaction chemistry analyses show that the RuO_2-induced catalysis introduces E2-elimination reactions which result in a carbon sp^3 âsp^2 transformation of the film. For the two modes of photoelectrochemical operation, the photovoltaic and the photoelectrocatalytic mode, 20 and 15 mA cm^(â2) photocurrent densities, respectively, are obtained with unaltered output for 8 and 24 h. The interfacial layer enables Si photovoltages of 500 mV, demonstrating extraordinary electronic interface quality. Since only hydrogen termination of the surface is a prerequisite for growth of the organic protection layer, the method is applicable to a wide range of semiconductors
Solar hydrogen evolution using metal-free photocatalytic polymeric carbon nitride/CuInS2 composites as photocathodes
Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugÀnglich.This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively.Polymeric carbon nitride (g-C3N4) films were synthesized on polycrystalline semiconductor CuInS2 chalcopyrite thin film electrodes by thermal polycondensation and were investigated as photocathodes for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) under photoelectrochemical conditions. The composite photocathode materials were compared to g-C3N4 powders and were characterized with grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoemission spectroscopy as well as Fourier transform infrared and Raman spectroscopies. Surface modification of polycrystalline CuInS2 semiconducting thin films with photocatalytically active g-C3N4 films revealed structural and chemical properties corresponding to the properties of g-C3N4 powders. The g-C3N4/CuInS2 composite photocathode material generates a cathodic photocurrent at potentials up to +0.36 V vs. RHE in 0.1 M H2SO4 aqueous solution (pH 1), which corresponds to a +0.15 V higher onset potential of cathodic photocurrent than the unmodified CuInS2 semiconducting thin film photocathodes. The cathodic photocurrent for the modified composite photocathode materials was reduced by almost 60% at the hydrogen redox potential. However, the photocurrent generated from the g-C3N4/CuInS2 composite electrode was stable for 22 h. Therefore, the presence of the polymeric g-C3N4 films composed of a network of nanoporous crystallites strongly protects the CuInS2 semiconducting substrate from degradation and photocorrosion under acidic conditions. Conversion of visible light to hydrogen by photoelectrochemical water splitting can thus be successfully achieved by g-C3N4 films synthesized on polycrystalline CuInS2 chalcopyrite electrodes.BMBF, 03IS2071D, Light2Hydroge
Optimized immobilization of ZnO:Co electrocatalysts realizes 5% efficiency in photoassisted splitting of water
Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugĂ€nglich.This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively.Correction: There is an error in Fig. 8 of the manuscript. The correct Fig. 8 is shown in the additional file. To cite the Correction refer to DOI:10.1039/c6ta90030e.Organic solvents with varied electrophoretic mobility have been employed for deposition of nanocrystalline ZnO: Co particles onto fluorinated tin oxide supports. Evaluation of the electrochemical activity for the oxygen evolution reaction proves a clear solvent-dependence with highest activity upon deposition from acetonitrile and lowest activity upon deposition from ethanol. Analysis of the resulting layer thickness and density attributes the improved electrochemical activity of acetonitrile-prepared samples to larger film thicknesses with lower film densities, i.e. to films with higher porosity. The findings suggest that the ZnO: Co films represent an initially nanocrystalline system where the catalytic activity is predominantly confined to a thin surface region rather than to comprise the entire volume. Closer inspection of this surface region proves successive in operando transformation of the nanocrystalline to an amorphous phase during evolution of oxygen. Furthermore, less active but highly transparent ZnO: Co phases, prepared from ethanol-containing suspensions, can be successfully employed in a stacking configuration with a low-cost triple-junction solar cell. Thereby, a solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of 5.0% in splitting of water at pH 14 could be realized. In contrast, highly light-absorbing acetonitrile/acetone-prepared samples limit the efficiency to about 1%, demonstrating thus the decisive influence of the used organic solvent upon electrophoretic deposition. Stability investigations over several days finally prove that the modular architecture, applied here, represents an attractive approach for coupling of highly active electrocatalysts with efficient photovoltaic devices.BMBF, 03IS2071F, Light2Hydrogen - Energien fĂŒr die ZukunftDFG, SPP 1613, Regenerativ erzeugte Brennstoffe durch lichtgetriebene Wasserspaltung: AufklĂ€rung der Elementarprozesse und Umsetzungsperspektiven auf technologische Konzept
Long-range structure of Cu(InxGa1-x)3Se5: A complementary neutron and anomalous x-ray diffraction study
The following article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics 109.1 (2011): 013518 and may be found at http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jap/109/1/10.1063/1.3524183Distinguishing the scattering contributions of isoelectronic atomic species by means of conventional x-ray- and/or electron diffraction techniques is a difficult task. Such a problem occurs when determining the crystal structure of compounds containing different types of atoms with equal number of electrons. We propose a new structural model of Cu(InxGa1-x) 3Se5 which is valid for the entire compositional range of the CuIn3Se5-CuGa3Se5 solid solution. Our model is based on neutron and anomalous x-ray diffraction experiments. These complementary techniques allow the separation of scattering contributions of the isoelectronic species Cu+ and Ga3+, contributing nearly identically in monoenergetic x-ray diffraction experiments. We have found that CuIII3Se5 (III =In,Ga) in its room temperature near-equilibrium modification exhibits a modified stannite structure (space group I4Ì2m). Different occupation factors of the species involved, Cu+ In3+, Ga3+, and vacancies have been found at three different cationic positions of the structure (Wyckoff sites 2a, 2b, and 4d) depending on the composition of the compound. Significantly, Cu+ does not occupy the 2b site for the In-free compound, but does for the In-containing case. Structural parameters, including lattice constants, tetragonal distortions, and occupation factors are given for samples covering the entire range of the CuIn 3Se5-CuGa3Se5 solid solution. At the light of the result, the denotation of Cu-poor 1:3:5 compounds as chalcopyrite-related materials is only valid in reference to their composition.This work was supported financially by the PPP-program Acciones Integradas Hispano-Alemanas of the DAAD under the Contract No. 314-Al-e-dr (HA2006-0025 spanish reference). Sylvio Haas is gratefully acknowledged for his support in anomalous XRD data acquisition and conversion