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research article

Highly active oxide photocathode for photoelectrochemical water reduction

Paracchino, Adriana  
•
Laporte, Vincent  
•
Sivula, Kevin  
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2011
Nature Materials

A clean and efficient way to overcome the limited supply of fossil fuels and the greenhouse effect is the production of hydrogen fuel from sunlight and water through the semiconductor/water junction of a photoelectrochemical cell, where energy collection and water electrolysis are combined into a single semiconductor electrode. We present a highly active photocathode for solar H-2 production, consisting of electrodeposited cuprous oxide, which was protected against photocathodic decomposition in water by nanolayers of Al-doped zinc oxide and titanium oxide and activated for hydrogen evolution with electrodeposited Pt nanoparticles. The roles of the different surface protection components were investigated, and in the best case electrodes showed photocurrents of up to -7.6 mA cm(-2) at a potential of 0V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode at mild pH. The electrodes remained active after 1 h of testing, cuprous oxide was found to be stable during the water reduction reaction and the Faradaic efficiency was estimated to be close to 100%.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/NMAT3017
Web of Science ID

WOS:000290855100021

Author(s)
Paracchino, Adriana  
Laporte, Vincent  
Sivula, Kevin  
Graetzel, Michael  
Thimsen, Elijah
Date Issued

2011

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

10

Start page

456

End page

461

Subjects

Atomic Layer Deposition

•

Li-Ion Batteries

•

P-Type Cu2O

•

Solar-Cells

•

2-Step Electrodeposition

•

H-2 Evolution

•

Films

•

Performance

•

Photocatalyst

•

Tio2

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPI  
CIME  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/74085
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