Photoelectrochemical
(PEC) water splitting is typically studied
at room temperature. In this work, the temperature effect on PEC water
splitting is studied using crystalline BiVO4 thin film
photoanode as a model system. Systematic temperature-dependent electrochemical
study demonstrates that the PEC activity is boosted at elevated electrolyte
temperatures and indicates that thermal energy plays a main role in
improving charge carrier transport in the bulk of BiVO4. Irreversible surface reconstruction is observed after PEC reactions
at elevated temperature in the presence of hole scavengers, with regularly
spaced stripes emerging on BiVO4 grains. The surface-reconstructed
photoanode exhibits up to 40% improvement in photocurrent densities
and ∼ 0.25 V shift of photocurrent onset to favorable direction.
Detailed investigation shows the formation of an amorphous layer without
stoichiometric change at the reconstructed surface. This work provides
insights of the temperature effect on the photoelectrode in solar
water splitting and reveals the non-negligible effect of hole scavengers
in photoelectrochemical measurement