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      A BiVO 4 Photoanode with a VO x Layer Bearing Oxygen Vacancies Offers Improved Charge Transfer and Oxygen Evolution Kinetics in Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting

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          Abstract

          Sluggish oxygen evolution kinetics are one of the key limitations of bismuth vanadate (BiVO 4) photoanodes for efficient photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting. To address this issue, we report a vanadium oxide (VO x) with enriched oxygen vacancies conformally grown on BiVO 4 photoanodes by a simple photo‐assisted electrodeposition process. The optimized BiVO 4/VO x photoanode exhibits a photocurrent density of 6.29 mA cm −2 at 1.23 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode under AM 1.5 G illumination, which is ca. 385 % as high as that of its pristine counterpart. A high charge‐transfer efficiency of 96 % is achieved and stable PEC water splitting is realized, with a photocurrent retention rate of 88.3 % upon 40 h of testing. The excellent PEC performance is attributed to the presence of oxygen vacancies in VO x that forms undercoordinated sites, which strengthen the adsorption of water molecules onto the active sites and promote charge transfer during the oxygen evolution reaction. This work demonstrates the potential of vanadium‐based catalysts for PEC water oxidation.

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          Nanoporous BiVO4 photoanodes with dual-layer oxygen evolution catalysts for solar water splitting.

          Bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) has a band structure that is well-suited for potential use as a photoanode in solar water splitting, but it suffers from poor electron-hole separation. Here, we demonstrate that a nanoporous morphology (specific surface area of 31.8 square meters per gram) effectively suppresses bulk carrier recombination without additional doping, manifesting an electron-hole separation yield of 0.90 at 1.23 volts (V) versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). We enhanced the propensity for surface-reaching holes to instigate water-splitting chemistry by serially applying two different oxygen evolution catalyst (OEC) layers, FeOOH and NiOOH, which reduces interface recombination at the BiVO4/OEC junction while creating a more favorable Helmholtz layer potential drop at the OEC/electrolyte junction. The resulting BiVO4/FeOOH/NiOOH photoanode achieves a photocurrent density of 2.73 milliamps per square centimenter at a potential as low as 0.6 V versus RHE.
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            Efficient solar water splitting by enhanced charge separation in a bismuth vanadate-silicon tandem photoelectrode.

            Metal oxides are generally very stable in aqueous solutions and cheap, but their photochemical activity is usually limited by poor charge carrier separation. Here we show that this problem can be solved by introducing a gradient dopant concentration in the metal oxide film, thereby creating a distributed n(+)-n homojunction. This concept is demonstrated with a low-cost, spray-deposited and non-porous tungsten-doped bismuth vanadate photoanode in which carrier-separation efficiencies of up to 80% are achieved. By combining this state-of-the-art photoanode with an earth-abundant cobalt phosphate water-oxidation catalyst and a double- or single-junction amorphous Si solar cell in a tandem configuration, stable short-circuit water-splitting photocurrents of ~4 and 3 mA cm(-2), respectively, are achieved under 1 sun illumination. The 4 mA cm(-2) photocurrent corresponds to a solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of 4.9%, which is the highest efficiency yet reported for a stand-alone water-splitting device based on a metal oxide photoanode.
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              An Inorganic/Organic S‐Scheme Heterojunction H 2 ‐Production Photocatalyst and its Charge Transfer Mechanism

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Angewandte Chemie International Edition
                Angew Chem Int Ed
                Wiley
                1433-7851
                1521-3773
                March 2023
                January 31 2023
                March 2023
                : 62
                : 10
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Frontiers Science Center for Flexible Electronics Xi'an Institute of Flexible Electronics (IFE) Xi'an Institute of Biomedical Materials & Engineering Northwestern Polytechnical University 127 West Youyi Road Xi'an 710072 China
                [2 ] Nanomaterials Centre School of Chemical Engineering and Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD 4072 Australia
                Article
                10.1002/anie.202217346
                36642699
                d590ee51-f0f4-430b-8096-5fae49c4c5cd
                © 2023

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