In:
Catalysis Science & Technology, Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), Vol. 12, No. 18 ( 2022), p. 5640-5648
Abstract:
Silicon (Si) is a promising semiconductor material in photoelectrochemical (PEC) H 2 evolution due to its advantages of being an earth-abundant element, non-toxicity, broad absorption of the solar spectrum, high saturation current and industrial fabrication. However, shortcomings such as strong sunlight reflection, low photocurrent onset potential, slow charge-transfer dynamics at the silicon/electrolyte interface, and low stability in electrolyte limit its PEC applications. In this work, surface-engineered nanoporous Si photocathodes with controllable surface morphologies were fabricated. Compared with flat Si (f-Si), chemically-etched Si (c-Si) and electrochemically-etched Si (ec-Si), PEC-etched Si (pec-Si) exhibits advantages such as high light-harvesting efficiency, a large surface area and improved electron-transfer, resulting in dramatically enhanced PEC water splitting. Additionally, n-type TiO 2 is deposited on the Si surface to prepare a p–n heterojunction and a protective layer, which further increases the charge separation and water splitting stability. Under AM1.5G illumination, the optimized pec-Si/TiO 2 photocathode gives a high photocurrent density of −15.53 mA cm −2 at 0 V RHE , a large onset potential of 0.60 V RHE , and a high applied bias photon-to-current efficiency of 2.22% for H 2 production. The surface engineering of the nanoporous structures and p–n heterojunction brings insights into the construction of efficient photoelectrodes for solar conversion.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
2044-4753
,
2044-4761
Language:
English
Publisher:
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Publication Date:
2022
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2595090-3
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