TU Darmstadt / ULB / TUbiblio

On the structural evolution of nanoporous optically transparent CuO photocathodes upon calcination for photoelectrochemical applications

Korell, Lukas ; Lauterbach, Stefan ; Timm, Jana ; Wang, Li ; Mellin, Maximilian ; Kundmann, Anna ; Wu, Qingyang ; Tian, Chuanmu ; Marschall, Roland ; Hofmann, Jan P. ; Osterloh, Frank E. ; Einert, Marcus (2024)
On the structural evolution of nanoporous optically transparent CuO photocathodes upon calcination for photoelectrochemical applications.
In: Nanoscale Advances, 6 (11)
doi: 10.1039/D4NA00199K
Artikel, Bibliographie

Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)

Copper oxides are promising photocathode materials for solar hydrogen production due to their narrow optical band gap energy allowing broad visible light absorption. However, they suffer from severe photocorrosion upon illumination, mainly due to copper reduction. Nanostructuring has been proven to enhance the photoresponse of CuO photocathodes; however, there is a lack of precise structural control on the nanoscale upon sol–gel synthesis and calcination for achieving optically transparent CuO thin film photoabsorbers. In this study, nanoporous and nanocrystalline CuO networks were prepared by a soft-templating and dip-coating method utilizing poly(ethylene oxide)- block -poly(propylene oxide)- block -poly(ethylene oxide) (Pluronic® F-127) as a structure-directing agent, resulting for the first-time in uniformly structured, crack-free, and optically transparent CuO thin films. The photoelectrochemical properties of the nanoporous CuO frameworks were investigated as a function of the calcination temperature and film thickness, revealing important information about the photocurrent, photostability, and photovoltage. Based on surface photovoltage spectroscopy (SPV), the films are p-type and generate up to 60 mV photovoltage at 2.0 eV (0.050 mW cm −2 ) irradiation for the film annealed at 750 °C. For these high annealing temperatures, the nanocrystalline domains in the thin film structure are more developed, resulting in improved electronic quality. In aqueous electrolytes with or without methyl viologen (as a fast electron acceptor), CuO films show cathodic photocurrents of up to −2.4 mA cm −2 at 0.32 V vs. RHE (air mass (AM) 1.5). However, the photocurrents were found to be entirely due to photocorrosion of the films and decay to near zero over the course of 20 min under AM 1.5 illumination. These fundamental results on the structural and morphological development upon calcination provide a direction and show the necessity for further (surface) treatment of sol–gel derived CuO photocathodes for photoelectrochemical applications. The study demonstrates how to control the size of nanopores starting from mesopore formation at 400 °C to the evolution of macroporous frameworks at 750 °C.

Typ des Eintrags: Artikel
Erschienen: 2024
Autor(en): Korell, Lukas ; Lauterbach, Stefan ; Timm, Jana ; Wang, Li ; Mellin, Maximilian ; Kundmann, Anna ; Wu, Qingyang ; Tian, Chuanmu ; Marschall, Roland ; Hofmann, Jan P. ; Osterloh, Frank E. ; Einert, Marcus
Art des Eintrags: Bibliographie
Titel: On the structural evolution of nanoporous optically transparent CuO photocathodes upon calcination for photoelectrochemical applications
Sprache: Englisch
Publikationsjahr: 2024
Verlag: Royal Society of Chemistry
Titel der Zeitschrift, Zeitung oder Schriftenreihe: Nanoscale Advances
Jahrgang/Volume einer Zeitschrift: 6
(Heft-)Nummer: 11
DOI: 10.1039/D4NA00199K
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract):

Copper oxides are promising photocathode materials for solar hydrogen production due to their narrow optical band gap energy allowing broad visible light absorption. However, they suffer from severe photocorrosion upon illumination, mainly due to copper reduction. Nanostructuring has been proven to enhance the photoresponse of CuO photocathodes; however, there is a lack of precise structural control on the nanoscale upon sol–gel synthesis and calcination for achieving optically transparent CuO thin film photoabsorbers. In this study, nanoporous and nanocrystalline CuO networks were prepared by a soft-templating and dip-coating method utilizing poly(ethylene oxide)- block -poly(propylene oxide)- block -poly(ethylene oxide) (Pluronic® F-127) as a structure-directing agent, resulting for the first-time in uniformly structured, crack-free, and optically transparent CuO thin films. The photoelectrochemical properties of the nanoporous CuO frameworks were investigated as a function of the calcination temperature and film thickness, revealing important information about the photocurrent, photostability, and photovoltage. Based on surface photovoltage spectroscopy (SPV), the films are p-type and generate up to 60 mV photovoltage at 2.0 eV (0.050 mW cm −2 ) irradiation for the film annealed at 750 °C. For these high annealing temperatures, the nanocrystalline domains in the thin film structure are more developed, resulting in improved electronic quality. In aqueous electrolytes with or without methyl viologen (as a fast electron acceptor), CuO films show cathodic photocurrents of up to −2.4 mA cm −2 at 0.32 V vs. RHE (air mass (AM) 1.5). However, the photocurrents were found to be entirely due to photocorrosion of the films and decay to near zero over the course of 20 min under AM 1.5 illumination. These fundamental results on the structural and morphological development upon calcination provide a direction and show the necessity for further (surface) treatment of sol–gel derived CuO photocathodes for photoelectrochemical applications. The study demonstrates how to control the size of nanopores starting from mesopore formation at 400 °C to the evolution of macroporous frameworks at 750 °C.

Fachbereich(e)/-gebiet(e): 11 Fachbereich Material- und Geowissenschaften
11 Fachbereich Material- und Geowissenschaften > Materialwissenschaft
11 Fachbereich Material- und Geowissenschaften > Materialwissenschaft > Fachgebiet Oberflächenforschung
Hinterlegungsdatum: 11 Dez 2024 06:24
Letzte Änderung: 11 Dez 2024 10:53
PPN: 524518211
Export:
Suche nach Titel in: TUfind oder in Google
Frage zum Eintrag Frage zum Eintrag

Optionen (nur für Redakteure)
Redaktionelle Details anzeigen Redaktionelle Details anzeigen