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research article

An Optically Transparent Iron Nickel Oxide Catalyst for Solar Water Splitting

Morales-Guio, Carlos G.  
•
Mayer, Matthew T.  
•
Yella, Aswani  
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2015
Journal of the American Chemical Society

Sunlight-driven water splitting to produce hydrogen fuel is an attractive method for renewable energy conversion. Tandem photoelectrochemical water splitting devices utilize two photoabsorbers to harvest the sunlight and drive the water splitting reaction. The absorption of sunlight by electrocatalysts is a severe problem for tandem water splitting devices where light needs to be transmitted through the larger bandgap component to illuminate the smaller bandgap component. Herein, we describe a novel method for the deposition of an optically transparent amorphous iron nickel oxide oxygen evolution electrocatalyst. The catalyst was deposited on both thin film and high-aspect ratio nanostructured hematite photoanodes. The low catalyst loading combined with its high activity at low overpotential results in significant improvement on the onset potential for photoelectrochemical water oxidation. This transparent catalyst further enables the preparation of a stable hematite/perovskite solar cell tandem device, which performs unassisted water splitting.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/jacs.5b05544
Web of Science ID

WOS:000359613300028

Author(s)
Morales-Guio, Carlos G.  
Mayer, Matthew T.  
Yella, Aswani  
Tilley, S. David  
Grätzel, Michael  
Hu, Xile  
Date Issued

2015

Published in
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume

137

Issue

13

Start page

9927

End page

9936

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSCI  
LPI  
Available on Infoscience
August 8, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/116889
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