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      Photoelectrochemical devices for solar water splitting – materials and challenges

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          Abstract

          PEC water splitting, characterized by the separate production of H 2 and O 2, is one promising solution for a sustainable society.

          Abstract

          It is widely accepted within the community that to achieve a sustainable society with an energy mix primarily based on solar energy we need an efficient strategy to convert and store sunlight into chemical fuels. A photoelectrochemical (PEC) device would therefore play a key role in offering the possibility of carbon-neutral solar fuel production through artificial photosynthesis. The past five years have seen a surge in the development of promising semiconductor materials. In addition, low-cost earth-abundant co-catalysts are ubiquitous in their employment in water splitting cells due to the sluggish kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). This review commences with a fundamental understanding of semiconductor properties and charge transfer processes in a PEC device. We then describe various configurations of PEC devices, including single light-absorber cells and multi light-absorber devices (PEC, PV-PEC and PV/electrolyser tandem cell). Recent progress on both photoelectrode materials (light absorbers) and electrocatalysts is summarized, and important factors which dominate photoelectrode performance, including light absorption, charge separation and transport, surface chemical reaction rate and the stability of the photoanode, are discussed. Controlling semiconductor properties is the primary concern in developing materials for solar water splitting. Accordingly, strategies to address the challenges for materials development in this area, such as the adoption of smart architectures, innovative device configuration design, co-catalyst loading, and surface protection layer deposition, are outlined throughout the text, to deliver a highly efficient and stable PEC device for water splitting.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          CSRVBR
          Chemical Society Reviews
          Chem. Soc. Rev.
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          0306-0012
          1460-4744
          2017
          2017
          : 46
          : 15
          : 4645-4660
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Chemical Engineering
          [2 ]University College London
          [3 ]Torrington Place
          [4 ]London
          [5 ]UK
          [6 ]State Key Laboratory of Catalysis
          [7 ]Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics
          [8 ]Chinese Academy of Sciences
          [9 ]Dalian
          [10 ]China
          Article
          10.1039/C6CS00306K
          28644493
          d39740be-17a3-4403-800e-7b235cc89fa0
          © 2017
          History

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