| Literature DB >> 31197140 |
Jie Jian1, Youxun Xu1, Xiaokun Yang1, Wei Liu1, Maosen Fu1, Huiwu Yu1, Fei Xu1, Fan Feng2, Lichao Jia2, Dennis Friedrich3, Roel van de Krol3, Hongqiang Wang4.
Abstract
Addressing the intrinsic charge transport limitation of metal oxides has been of significance for pursuing viable PEC water splitting photoelectrodes. Growing a photoelectrode with conductive nanoobjects embedded in the matrix is promising for enhanced charge transport but remains a challenge technically. We herein show a strategy of embedding laser generated nanocrystals in BiVO4 photoanode matrix, which achieves photocurrent densities of up to 5.15 mA cm-2 at 1.23 VRHE (from original 4.01 mA cm-2) for a single photoanode configuration, and 6.22 mA cm-2 at 1.23 VRHE for a dual configuration. The enhanced performance by such embedding is found universal owing to the typical features of laser synthesis and processing of colloids (LSPC) for producing ligand free nanocrystals in desired solvents. This study provides an alternative to address the slow bulk charge transport that bothers most metal oxides, and thus is significant for boosting their PEC water splitting performance.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31197140 PMCID: PMC6565742 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10543-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1LBSO before and after LSPC. a Schematic illustration of LSPC. b Optical image of LBSO particles dispersed in the solvent before LSPC. c SEM image and d XRD pattern of LBSO particles fabricated. e Mie-scattering image of laser generated LBSO colloidal nanocrystals (LBSO-NCs). f TEM and HRTEM image (insert) of LBSO nanocrystals generated by pulsed laser irradiation. g XRD pattern of LBSO nanocrystals after pulsed laser irradiation. Scale bars: (c) 250 nm, (f) 20 nm and insert of (f) 2 nm
Fig. 2Characterizations of MBVO and LBSO-MBVO films. a SEM top-view, b SEM cross-section, c TEM, and d HRTEM image of MBVO films. e SEM top-view, f SEM cross-section, g TEM image, h FFT-transformation image and i HRTEM image of LBSO-MBVO-2 film. j FFT-transformation image of MBVO matrix (area labeled in blue in Figure i). k FFT-transformation image of LBSO nanocrystal (area labeled in red in Figure i). l HAADF image and corresponding EDX-line scanning of LBSO-MBVO-2 film. m TEM-EDS analysis of LBSO-MBVO-2 film. Scale bars: (a, e) 500 nm, (b, f) 250 nm, (c, g) 20 nm, (d, i) 5 nm, (h) 2 1/nm, (j, k) 5 1/nm, (l) 10 nm and (m) 100 nm
Fig. 3Performance of MBVO and LBSO-MBVO films. a Schematic representation of pulsed laser generated nanocrystals embedded MBVO films. b J–V curves of different LBSO-MBVO photoanodes under AM 1.5G irradiation. c Photocurrent density distribution of MBVO and LBSO-MBVO films at 1.23 VRHE. d J–V curves of the LBSO-MBVO-2 dual photoanodes under AM 1.5G irradiation. Insert: schematic of LBSO-MBVO-2 photoanodes with dual configuration. e IPCE curves at 1.23 VRHE and f EIS curves of different LBSO-MBVO photoanodes. g MS curves of MBVO and LBSO-MBVO-2 films. h Time-resolved microwave conductance signals recorded for MBVO and LBSO-MBVO-2 films using a 410 nm laser pulse with a photon flux of 1.84 × 1014 photons pulse−1 cm−2. i Maximum TRMC signals as a function of incident photons per laser pulse for MBVO and LBSO-MBVO-2 films
Fig. 4Characterizations of WO3 and Au nanocrystals and performance of WO3-MBVO and Au-MBVO films. a Optical image of laser generated WO3 colloidal nanocrystals with the mixed solvents. b Mie-scattering images of laser generated WO3 colloidal nanocrystals. c TEM and HRTEM images of laser generated WO3 nanocrystals. d J–V and e IPCE curves of MBVO and WO3-MBVO photoanodes. f Optical image of laser generated Au colloidal nanocrystals with the mixed solvents. g Mie-scattering images of laser generated Au colloidal nanocrystals. h TEM and HRTEM images of laser generated Au nanocrystals. i J–V and j IPCE curves of MBVO and Au-MBVO photoanodes. Scale bars: (c, h) 50 nm and insert of (c, h) 2 nm