TY - JOUR
T1 - Solar-Driven Photoelectrochemical Water Oxidation over an n-Type Lead-Titanium Oxyfluoride Anode
AU - Hirayama, Naoki
AU - Nakata, Hiroko
AU - Wakayama, Haruki
AU - Nishioka, Shunta
AU - Kanazawa, Tomoki
AU - Kamata, Ryutaro
AU - Ebato, Yosuke
AU - Kato, Kosaku
AU - Kumagai, Hiromu
AU - Yamakata, Akira
AU - Oka, Kengo
AU - Maeda, Kazuhiko
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Area “Mixed Anion (Project JP16H06441, JP17H05489, JP17H05491, JP19H04706, and JP19H04708)” (JSPS). It was also partially supported by a Grant-in-Aids for Scientific Research (B) (Project JP19H02511), and for Challenging Research (Exploratory) (Project JP17K19169). S.N. and T. K. wish to acknowledge support by a JSPS Fellowship for Young Scientists (Project JP18J10457 and JP18J10548).
Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Area "Mixed Anion (Project JP16H06441, JP17H05489, JP17H05491, JP19H04706, and JP19H04708)" (JSPS). It was also partially supported by a Grant-in-Aids for Scientific Research (B) (Project JP19H02511), and for Challenging Research (Exploratory) (Project JP17K19169). S.N. and T. K. wish to acknowledge support by a JSPS Fellowship for Young Scientists (Project JP18J10457 and JP18J10548).
PY - 2019/10/30
Y1 - 2019/10/30
N2 - Mixed-anion compounds (e.g., oxynitrides and oxysulfides) are potential candidates as photoanodes for visible-light water oxidation, but most of them suffer from oxidative degradation by photogenerated holes, leading to low stability. Here we show an exceptional example of a stable, mixed-anion water-oxidation photoanode that consists of an oxyfluoride, Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2, having a band gap of ca. 2.4 eV. Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 particles, which were coated on a transparent conductive glass (FTO) support and were subject to postdeposition of a TiO2 overlayer, generated an anodic photocurrent upon band gap photoexcitation of Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 (λ <520 nm) with a rather negative photocurrent onset potential of ca. -0.6 V vs NHE, which was independent of the pH of the electrolyte solution. Stable photoanodic current was observed even without loading a water oxidation promoter such as CoOx. Nevertheless, loading CoOx onto the TiO2/Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2/FTO electrode further improved the anodic photoresponse by a factor of 2-3. Under AM1.5G simulated sunlight (100 mW cm-2), stable water oxidation to form O2 was achieved using the optimized Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 photoanode in the presence of an applied potential smaller than 1.23 V, giving a Faradaic efficiency of 93% and almost no sign of deactivation during 4 h of operation. This study presents the first example of photoelectrochemical water splitting driven by visible-light excitation of an oxyfluoride that stably works, even without a water oxidation promoter, which is distinct from ordinary mixed-anion photoanodes that usually require a water oxidation promoter.
AB - Mixed-anion compounds (e.g., oxynitrides and oxysulfides) are potential candidates as photoanodes for visible-light water oxidation, but most of them suffer from oxidative degradation by photogenerated holes, leading to low stability. Here we show an exceptional example of a stable, mixed-anion water-oxidation photoanode that consists of an oxyfluoride, Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2, having a band gap of ca. 2.4 eV. Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 particles, which were coated on a transparent conductive glass (FTO) support and were subject to postdeposition of a TiO2 overlayer, generated an anodic photocurrent upon band gap photoexcitation of Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 (λ <520 nm) with a rather negative photocurrent onset potential of ca. -0.6 V vs NHE, which was independent of the pH of the electrolyte solution. Stable photoanodic current was observed even without loading a water oxidation promoter such as CoOx. Nevertheless, loading CoOx onto the TiO2/Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2/FTO electrode further improved the anodic photoresponse by a factor of 2-3. Under AM1.5G simulated sunlight (100 mW cm-2), stable water oxidation to form O2 was achieved using the optimized Pb2Ti2O5.4F1.2 photoanode in the presence of an applied potential smaller than 1.23 V, giving a Faradaic efficiency of 93% and almost no sign of deactivation during 4 h of operation. This study presents the first example of photoelectrochemical water splitting driven by visible-light excitation of an oxyfluoride that stably works, even without a water oxidation promoter, which is distinct from ordinary mixed-anion photoanodes that usually require a water oxidation promoter.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.9b06570
DO - 10.1021/jacs.9b06570
M3 - Article
C2 - 31588742
AN - SCOPUS:85073712685
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 141
SP - 17158
EP - 17165
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 43
ER -