Issue 22, 2013

Charge carrier separation in nanostructured TiO2 photoelectrodes for water splitting

Abstract

There is intense interest in developing new novel nanostructured photoanodes for water splitting. It is therefore important that methods to analyze the effect of nanostructuring on water splitting yields are developed in order to rationalize the relative merits of this approach for different materials. In this study the dependence of charge separation efficiency (ηsep) on potential during photoelectrochemical water splitting at pH 2 has been quantified in a model electrode system (nanocrystalline, mesoporous TiO2) using two independent methods. These are (i) analysis of incident photon conversion efficiency (IPCE) measurements and (ii) transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy measurements. The techniques provide good agreement with each other and show that a low maximum value of ηsep (∼0.18) is the primary cause of the low IPCE for water oxidation on these nc-TiO2 electrodes.

Graphical abstract: Charge carrier separation in nanostructured TiO2 photoelectrodes for water splitting

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Jan 2013
Accepted
16 Apr 2013
First published
17 Apr 2013

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013,15, 8772-8778

Charge carrier separation in nanostructured TiO2 photoelectrodes for water splitting

A. J. Cowan, W. Leng, P. R. F. Barnes, D. R. Klug and J. R. Durrant, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013, 15, 8772 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP50318F

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