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Published January 10, 2014 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Improving O₂ production of WO₃ photoanodes with IrO₂ in acidic aqueous electrolyte

Abstract

WO₃ is a promising candidate for a photoanode material in an acidic electrolyte, in which it is more stable than most metal oxides, but kinetic limitations combined with the large driving force available in the WO₃ valence band for water oxidation make competing reactions such as the oxidation of the acid counterion a more favorable reaction. The incorporation of an oxygen evolving catalyst (OEC) on the WO₃ surface can improve the kinetics for water oxidation and increase the branching ratio for O₂ production. Ir-based OECs were attached to WO₃ photoanodes by a variety of methods including sintering from metal salts, sputtering, drop-casting of particles, and electrodeposition to analyze how attachment strategies can affect photoelectrochemical oxygen production at WO₃ photoanodes in 1 M H₂SO₄. High surface coverage of catalyst on the semiconductor was necessary to ensure that most minority-carrier holes contributed to water oxidation through an active catalyst site rather than a side-reaction through the WO₃/electrolyte interface. Sputtering of IrO₂ layers on WO₃ did not detrimentally affect the energy-conversion behavior of the photoanode and improved the O₂ yield at 1.2 V vs. RHE from ~0% for bare WO₃ to 50–70% for a thin, optically transparent catalyst layer to nearly 100% for thick, opaque catalyst layers. Measurements with a fast one-electron redox couple indicated ohmic behavior at the IrO₂/WO₃ junction, which provided a shunt pathway for electrocatalytic IrO₂ behavior with the WO₃ photoanode under reverse bias. Although other OECs were tested, only IrO₂ displayed extended stability under the anodic operating conditions in acid as determined by XPS.

Additional Information

© 2014 the Owner Societies. Received 31 Dec 2013, Accepted 10 Jan 2014, First published online 10 Jan 2014. This material is based upon work performed by the Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis, a DOE Energy Innovation Hub, supported through the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Award Number DE-SC0004993. XPS data were collected at the Molecular Materials Research Center of the Beckman Institute of the California Institute of Technology.

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Supplemental Material - c3cp55527e_si.pdf

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