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A colloidal heterostructured quantum dot sensitized carbon nanotube-TiO(2) hybrid photoanode for high efficiency hydrogen generation.

PubMed
Authors: Selopal GS, Mohammadnezhad M, Navarro-Pardo F, Vidal F, Zhao H, Wang ZM, Rosei F

Year

2019

Paper ID

1703

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

275

Citations

42

Abstract

Solar-driven photoelectrochemical (PEC) hydrogen (H) generation is a promising approach to harvest solar energy for the production of a clean chemical fuel. However, the low photon-to-fuel conversion efficiency and long-term stability of PEC devices are major challenges to be addressed to enable large-scale commercialization. Here we report a simple, fast and cost-effective approach to fabricate high efficiency and stable PEC devices for H generation, by fabricating a hybrid photoanode obtained by incorporating small amounts of multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) into a TiO mesoporous film and sensitizing with colloidal heterostructured CdSe/(CdSeS)/(CdS) quantum dots (QDs). The latter were specially designed to accelerate the exciton separation through a band engineering approach. The PEC devices based on the TiO/QD-MWCNT (T/Q-M) hybrid photoanode with an optimized amount of MWCNTs (0.015 wt%) yield a saturated photocurrent density of 15.90 mA cm (at 1.0 V) under one sun illumination (AM 1.5G, 100 mW cm), which is 40% higher than that of the reference device based on TiO/QD (T/Q) photoanodes. This is attributed to a synergistic effect of the promising optoelectronic properties of the colloidal heterostructured QDs and improved electron transport (reduced charge transfer resistance) within the TiO-MWCNT hybrid anodes enabled by the directional path of MWCNTs for the photo-injected electrons towards FTO. Furthermore, the PEC device based on the T/Q-M hybrid photoanode is more stable (∼19% loss of its initial photocurrent density) when compared with the T/Q photoanode (∼35% loss) after two hours of continuous one sun illumination. Our results provide fundamental insights and a different approach to improve the efficiency and long-term stability of PEC devices and represent an essential step towards the commercialization of this emerging solar-to-fuel conversion technology.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Spin Qubits & Silicon Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2019 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Solar-driven photoelectrochemical (PEC) hydrogen (H) generation is a promising approach to harvest solar energy for the production of a clean chemical fuel.

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