Issue 3, 2014

Efficient solar photoelectrolysis by nanoporous Mo:BiVO4 through controlled electron transport

Abstract

A detailed understanding of doping level, electron diffusion length and coefficient, as well as light capture and charge separation efficiencies in nanoporous Mo-doped BiVO4 (Mo:BiVO4) photoanodes is obtained using photoelectrochemical techniques. Efficient water oxidation is achieved by doping with 1.8% Mo, resulting in a several-fold enhancement in photooxidation rate versus non-doped BiVO4. Two techniques are used to study the effect of Mo doping on the electron transport: (1) an analysis of the front/back illumination ratio of incident photon-to-current efficiency and (2) intensity modulated photocurrent spectroscopy. These techniques show that Mo doping improves the diffusion coefficient four-fold and increases the diffusion length to ca. 300 nm (from 10 nm for the non-doped material), which is also the empirically-determined optimal Mo:BiVO4 film thickness for photoelectrolysis. These films are found to have a 90% charge separation efficiency and an 80% absorbed photon-to-current efficiency, excellent values for metal oxide photoabsorbers. Among the many oxygen evolution catalysts studied, surface modification with iron oxyhydroxide (FeOOH), a simple earth abundant catalyst, dramatically enhances the water oxidation performance of Mo:BiVO4 to an integrated IPCE of 2.41 mA cm−2 and a photocurrent density of 2.77 mA cm−2 in neutral phosphate at 1.23 V vs. RHE.

Graphical abstract: Efficient solar photoelectrolysis by nanoporous Mo:BiVO4 through controlled electron transport

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Oct 2013
Accepted
18 Nov 2013
First published
19 Nov 2013

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014,16, 1121-1131

Efficient solar photoelectrolysis by nanoporous Mo:BiVO4 through controlled electron transport

J. A. Seabold, K. Zhu and N. R. Neale, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014, 16, 1121 DOI: 10.1039/C3CP54356K

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