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Transparent Stacked Photoanodes with Efficient Light Management for Solar-Driven Photoelectrochemical Cells.

Thanh Tai NguyenMalkeshkumar PatelSangho KimVinh-Ai DaoJoondong Kim
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Solar-driven hydrogen generation is one of the most promising approaches for building a sustainable energy system. Photovoltaic-assisted photoanodes can help to reduce the overpotential of water splitting in photoelectrochemical (PEC) cells. Transparent photoanodes can improve light-conversion efficiency by absorbing high-energy photons while transmitting lower energy photons to the photocathode for hydrogen production. In this work, transparent photoanodes were implemented by forming metal-oxide junctions of NiO/TiO2 heterostructures for creating the photovoltaic effect. The photovoltaic-induced transparent photoelectrode (PTPE) provides the photovoltage (0.7 V), which efficiently reduces the onset potential voltage by -0.38 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE), as compared to 0.17 V versus RHE for a single-TiO2 photoanode. The PEC cell has a high photocurrent of 1.68 mA at 1.23 V with respect to the RHE. The chemical endurance of metal-oxides maintains the stability of the PTPE for over 100 h in an alkaline electrolyte of 0.1 M KOH. The results of this study reveal that combining multiple PTPE cells to create a stacked photoanode enhances the photocurrent roughly in proportion to the number of PTPE cells. This design scheme for optimizing the light-conversion efficiency in a PTPE-photoanode system is promising for creating robust systems for on-site energy producers.
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