Issue 48, 2020

More than protection: the function of TiO2 interlayers in hematite functionalized Si photoanodes

Abstract

Worldwide significant efforts are ongoing to develop devices that store solar energy as fuels. In one such approach, solar energy is absorbed by semiconductors and utilized directly by catalysts at their surfaces to split water into H2 and O2. To protect the semiconductors in these photo-electrochemical cells (PEC) from corrosion, frequently thin TiO2 interlayers are applied. Employing a well-performing photoanode comprised of 1-D n-Si microwires (MWs) covered with a mesoporous (mp) TiO2 interlayer fabricated by solution processing and functionalized with α-Fe2O3 nanorods, we studied here the function of this TiO2 interlayer by high-energy resolution fluorescence detected X-ray absorption near edge structure (HERFD-XANES) spectroscopy, along with X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) and standard characterization techniques. Our data reveal that the TiO2 interlayer not only protects the n-Si MW surface from corrosion, but that it also acts as a template for the hydrothermal growth of α-Fe2O3 nanorods and improves the photocatalytic efficiency. We show that the latter effect correlates with the presence of stable oxygen vacancies at the interface between mp-TiO2 and α-Fe2O3, which act as electron traps and thereby substantially reduce the charge recombination rate at the hematite surface.

Graphical abstract: More than protection: the function of TiO2 interlayers in hematite functionalized Si photoanodes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Aug 2020
Accepted
22 Nov 2020
First published
23 Nov 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020,22, 28459-28467

More than protection: the function of TiO2 interlayers in hematite functionalized Si photoanodes

A. Kawde, A. Annamalai, A. Sellstedt, J. Uhlig, T. Wågberg, P. Glatzel and J. Messinger, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020, 22, 28459 DOI: 10.1039/D0CP04280C

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