Bipolar charge collecting structure enables overall water splitting on ferroelectric photocatalysts.
Yong LiuMingjian ZhangZhuan WangJiandong HeJie ZhangSheng YeXiuli WangDongfeng LiHeng YinQianhong ZhuHuanwang JingYuxiang WengFeng PanRuotian ChenCan LiFengtao FanPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Ferroelectrics are considered excellent photocatalytic candidates for solar fuel production because of the unidirectional charge separation and above-gap photovoltage. Nevertheless, the performance of ferroelectric photocatalysts is often moderate. A few studies showed that these types of photocatalysts could achieve overall water splitting. This paper proposes an approach to fabricating interfacial charge-collecting nanostructures on positive and negative domains of ferroelectric, enabling water splitting in ferroelectric photocatalysts. The present study observes efficient accumulations of photogenerated electrons and holes within their thermalization length (~50 nm) around Au nanoparticles located in the positive and negative domains of a BaTiO 3 single crystal. Photocatalytic overall water splitting is observed on a ferroelectric BaTiO 3 single crystal after assembling oxidation and reduction cocatalysts on the positively and negatively charged Au nanoparticles, respectively. The fabrication of bipolar charge-collecting structures on ferroelectrics to achieve overall water splitting offers a way to utilize the energetic photogenerated charges in solar energy conversion.