Rational Design Combining Morphology and Charge-Dynamic for Hematite/Nickel-Iron Oxide Thin-Layer Photoanodes: Insights into the Role of the Absorber/Catalyst Junction.

adaptive junction impedance spectroscopy nickel iron oxide oxygen-evolving catalyst photoelectrosynthesis porous morphology pulsed laser deposition thin-layer photoanode

Journal

ACS applied materials & interfaces
ISSN: 1944-8252
Titre abrégé: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101504991

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
26 Dec 2019
Historique:
pubmed: 5 12 2019
medline: 5 12 2019
entrez: 5 12 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Water oxidation represents the anodic reaction in most of the photoelectrosynthetic setups for artificial photosynthesis developed so far. The efficiency of the overall process strongly depends on the joint exploitation of good absorber domains and interfaces with minimized recombination pathways. To this end, we report on the effective coupling of thin-layer hematite with amorphous porous nickel-iron oxide catalysts prepared via pulsed laser deposition. The rational design of such composite photoelectrodes leads to the formation of a functional adaptive junction, with enhanced photoanodic properties with respect to bare hematite. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy has contributed to shed light on the mechanisms of photocurrent generation, confirming the reduction of recombination pathways as the main contributor to the improved performances of the functionalized photoelectrodes. Our results highlight the importance of the amorphous catalysts' morphology, as dense and electrolyte impermeable layers hinder the pivotal charge compensation processes at the interface. The direct comparison with all-iron and all-nickel catalytic counterparts further confirms that control over the kinetics of both hole transfer and charge recombination, enabled by the adaptive junction, is key for the optimal operation of this kind of semiconductor/catalyst interfaces.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31797662
doi: 10.1021/acsami.9b19790
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

48002-48012

Auteurs

Michele Orlandi (M)

Department of Physics , University of Trento , Via Sommarive 14 , Povo , Trento I-38123 , Italy.

Serena Berardi (S)

Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Ferrara , Via Fossato di Mortara 17-19 , Ferrara 44100 , Italy.

Alberto Mazzi (A)

Department of Physics , University of Trento , Via Sommarive 14 , Povo , Trento I-38123 , Italy.

Stefano Caramori (S)

Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Ferrara , Via Fossato di Mortara 17-19 , Ferrara 44100 , Italy.

Rita Boaretto (R)

Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Ferrara , Via Fossato di Mortara 17-19 , Ferrara 44100 , Italy.

Francesco Nart (F)

Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Ferrara , Via Fossato di Mortara 17-19 , Ferrara 44100 , Italy.

Carlo A Bignozzi (CA)

Department of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences , University of Ferrara , Via Fossato di Mortara 17-19 , Ferrara 44100 , Italy.

Nicola Bazzanella (N)

Department of Physics , University of Trento , Via Sommarive 14 , Povo , Trento I-38123 , Italy.

Nainesh Patel (N)

Department of Physics , University of Mumbai , Vidyanagari, Santacruz (E) , Mumbai 400 098 , India.

Antonio Miotello (A)

Department of Physics , University of Trento , Via Sommarive 14 , Povo , Trento I-38123 , Italy.

Classifications MeSH