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Successive redox-mediated visible-light ferrophotovoltaics.

Yuji NoguchiYuki TaniguchiRyotaro InoueMasaru Miyayama
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Titanium oxide materials have multiple functions such as photocatalytic and photovoltaic effects. Ferroelectrics provide access to light energy conversion that delivers above-bandgap voltages arising from spatial inversion symmetry breaking, whereas their wide bandgap leads to poor absorption of visible light. Bandgap narrowing offers a potential solution, but this material modification suppresses spontaneous polarization and, hence, sacrifices photovoltages. Here, we report successive-redox mediated ferrophotovoltaics that exhibit a robust visible-light response. Our single-crystal experiments and ab initio calculations, along with photo-luminescence analysis, demonstrate that divalent Fe2+ and trivalent Fe3+ coexisted in a prototypical ferroelectric barium titanate BaTiO3 introduce donor and acceptor levels, respectively, and that two sequential Fe3+/Fe2+ redox reactions enhance the photogenerated power not only under visible light but also at photon energies greater than the bandgap. Our approach opens a promising route to the visible-light activation of photovoltaics and, potentially, of photocatalysts.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • signaling pathway
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • molecular dynamics
  • computed tomography
  • electron transfer
  • quantum dots
  • solar cells
  • living cells
  • energy transfer
  • fluorescent probe
  • reduced graphene oxide