Study of Novel Metal Oxide Semiconductor Photoanodes for Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting Applications


Book Description

Solar hydrogen is one ideal and sustainable energy source to replace fossil fuel. Solar Photovoltaic (PV) cells normally generate electricity using sunlight, but it is renewable only as long as our sun shines. Converting sunlight into electricity is an efficient way to address energy crisis but harvesting solar energy in the form of chemical energy is a sustainable solution for fueling tomorrows. Storing energy in the form of hydrogen bond is more efficient not only because of its high energy density and but also it is a clean energy source. Hydrogen can be generated in a number of ways, including but not limited to steam reforming, thermolysis, and electrolysis. Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is one of the most promising methods for solar-to-chemical energy conversion. In order to address the need for clean and renewable energy, recent trends in global CO2 emissions and energy production are analyzed, and the photoelectrochemical properties of multi-metal oxide based thin films are presented. Bismuth vanadate (BiVO4), barium bismuth niobate (Ba2BiNbO6), and antimony vanadate (SbVO4) were investigated for use as photoelectrodes in PEC water splitting for solar hydrogen production. This dissertation starts with synthesis, deposition, and characterization of antimony vanadate and Sb alloyed bismuth vanadate thin films to observe their photoelectrochemical ability to split water. Antimony doping in bismuth vanadate thin films prompts to modify valence and conduction band edges of bismuth vanadate. It has been found that Sb alloying with less than 20% wt. improves the electron conductivity and consequently leads to significant enhancement of photocurrents without creating secondary phases. The hole mobility is further improved by incorporating NaF and metallic Ni on the surface of the electrode. The NaF incorporation is believed to reduce electron effective mass and therefore increased electron mobility by suppressing scattering centers. As a result, antimony doped thin films exhibited much improved performance in PEC water splitting as compared to pure sputtered BiVO4. The metallic Ni deposition on the surface of Sb-doped BiVO4 acted as electrode corrosion inhibitor. But we found that Ni topping can enhance the stability of electrode in strong acidic solutions at the cost of reducing its optical absorption and hence lowering its photon-to-electron conversion efficiency. However, surface modification of thin films using various stack structure and oxides coatings helped to enhance their stability along with the oxygen evolution catalysis. Large area Bi-based quaternary oxides (Ba2Bi1.4Nb0.6O6 and Ba2BiNbO6) were deposited using RF sputtering deposition and the effects of surface-modification was also investigated using various electrochemical methods. Thin film uniformity was obtained by incorporating oxygen gas in the sputtering plasma. Photoelectrochemical thin films with higher stability in aqueous solution and better corrosion resistant were fabricated, analyzed, and tested. Capacitance-voltage measurement was used to measure the chemical kinetics of interfacial electron transfer of the system. Charge-carrier mobility was extremely limited by the rate of recombination, while the surface chemistry was altered by using Oxygen Evolution Reaction (OER) catalysts. Using the OER catalysts significantly reduced the surface recombination losses thereby extending hole carrier lifetime. Finally, a novel, high-throughput, combinatorial approach for the material synthesis and screening of mixed-metal oxides for photoanode design was developed. This methodology relies on controlling stoichiometric ratio of different sputtering yield metal oxides. After fabrication, the photoelectrochemical properties of oxide electrodes can be fully characterized by using various optical and electrochemical technique.




Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting


Book Description

Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is a highly promising process for converting solar energy into hydrogen energy. The book presents new cutting-edge research findings in this field. Subjects covered include fabrication and characteristics of various electrode materials, cell design and strategies for enhancing the properties of PEC electrode materials. Keywords: Renewable Energy Sources, Solar Energy Conversion, Hydrogen Production, Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting, Electrode Materials for Water Splitting, Transition Metal Chalcogenide Electrodes, Narrow Bandgap Semiconductor Electrodes, Ti-based Electrode Materials, BiVO4 Photoanodes, Noble Electrode Materials, Cell Design for Water Splitting.




Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting


Book Description

Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is a highly promising process for converting solar energy into hydrogen energy. The book presents new cutting-edge research findings in this field. Subjects covered include fabrication and characteristics of various electrode materials, cell design and strategies for enhancing the properties of PEC electrode materials. Keywords: Renewable Energy Sources, Solar Energy Conversion, Hydrogen Production, Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting, Electrode Materials for Water Splitting, Transition Metal Chalcogenide Electrodes, Narrow Bandgap Semiconductor Electrodes, Ti-based Electrode Materials, BiVO4 Photoanodes, Noble Electrode Materials, Cell Design for Water Splitting.




Growth and Characterization of Transition Metal Oxide Semiconductors for the Photoelectrochemical Oxidation of Water Using Visible Light


Book Description

The first chapter in this thesis presents an introduction and background motivation for artificial photosynthesis using transition metal oxide semiconductors. Also included is a section on some fundamental concepts of electrochemistry with semiconductors for the reader that may be unfamiliar with this research area. The second and third chapters are devoted to copper tungstate (CuWO4), an n-type semiconductor with a band gap of 2.0 eV that exhibits great promise as the photoanode in a z-scheme water-splitting device. The second chapter is in regards to CuWO4 thin films deposited via reactive-ion co-sputtering, while the third chapter presents a novel technique for the preparation of nanostructured CuWO4 with the aim of addressing some fundamental limitations when using 3rd-row transition metal oxide materials. In the second chapter, a detailed systematic study into the co-sputter growth conditions of CuWO4 will be presented with the aim of understanding the optimal growth parameters for photoelectrochemical applications. Structural and electronic characterization of the thin films will be presented to demonstrate the quality of the growth process. A thickness series was performed to determine the optimal thickness for maximizing photocurrent density. The photocurrent density reported in this thesis is the highest current density thus reported in the literature for CuWO4 at the thermodynamic water oxidation potential. A two-electrode experiment was performed in order to determine the feasibility of utilizing CuWO4 in a z-scheme device. A number of oxygen evolution reaction catalysts were deposited onto the surface of CuWO4 thin films and their effect on the overall current density will be discussed. Long-duration potentiostatic measurements were carried out over a wide range of pH values to ascertain the stability of the material, and a discussion into possible degradation mechanisms will be discussed. Finally, the efficacy of CuWO4 as a water oxidation catalyst will be demonstrated and discussed. The third chapter in this thesis shall discuss two novel approaches for the formation of nanostructured CuWO4 with the aim of overcoming the inherently poor minority carrier mobility that has thus far slowed limited photoelectrochemical applications of the material. In the first approach, anodic aluminum oxide nanotemplates were utilized in an attempt to electrochemically deposit CuWO4 nanowires into the pores. In the second approach, a novel nitric acid treatment on tungsten thin films was utilized to develop a nanostructured surface followed by incorporation of copper using an combined physical vapor deposition and subsequent annealing process. The overall results of both techniques will be discussed. The fourth and final chapter in this thesis is a report on the growth and characterization of a nickel iron oxide alloy material to serve as a photoanode. Thin films were grown via reactive-ion co-sputtering of nickel and iron metal targets in the presence of oxygen. Optical, structural, electronic, and photoelectrochemical characterization was performed and the results shall be discussed. Two appendices complete the work. The first appendix is a list of characterization and deposition instruments utilized throughout this body of work. The second appendix is a collection of Mathematica® programs developed during the course of the author's Ph. D. studies in order to aid in data collection and analysis.




Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting


Book Description

This book outlines many of the techniques involved in materials development and characterization for photoelectrochemical (PEC) – for example, proper metrics for describing material performance, how to assemble testing cells and prepare materials for assessment of their properties, and how to perform the experimental measurements needed to achieve reliable results towards better scientific understanding. For each technique, proper procedure, benefits, limitations, and data interpretation are discussed. Consolidating this information in a short, accessible, and easy to read reference guide will allow researchers to more rapidly immerse themselves into PEC research and also better compare their results against those of other researchers to better advance materials development. This book serves as a “how-to” guide for researchers engaged in or interested in engaging in the field of photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting. PEC water splitting is a rapidly growing field of research in which the goal is to develop materials which can absorb the energy from sunlight to drive electrochemical hydrogen production from the splitting of water. The substantial complexity in the scientific understanding and experimental protocols needed to sufficiently pursue accurate and reliable materials development means that a large need exists to consolidate and standardize the most common methods utilized by researchers in this field.




Metal Oxide and Group III-nitride Nanomaterials for Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting


Book Description

Photoelectrochemical (PEC) cell is a device generated hydrogen fuel through an environmentally friendly method. The earliest report should date back to 1972. Honda and Fujishima first demonstrated solar water splitting by using titanium dioxide as photoanode in the cell. Then extensive efforts have been devoted to improving the solar-to-hydrogen (STH) conversion efficiency and decreasing the cost. However, current the efficiency of PEC device was limited on finding out a suitable photoanode material. The ideal photoanode material should have a good bandgap, favorable bandgap position, chemically stable and low cost. Therefore, this thesis would focus on studying different photoanode materials including GaN, TiO2 and Fe2O 3 to achieve high PEC water oxidation performance. In this thesis, I will first designed GaN nanowires on carbon cloth via a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method and demonstrated significant photoactivity for photoelectrochemical water oxidation. In addition, our group used to report a facile and general strategy to fundamentally improve the performance of TiO2 nanowires for PEC water splitting. However, there are some concerns about the real effects under higher hydrogen treated temperature as well as the stability of oxygen vacancies in TiO2. Therefore I investigated the effect of hydrogenation temperature and the stability of oxygen vacancies in TiO2 photoanodes. Furthermore, there are few reports about the study on the long term stability of TiO2 photoanode even though most scholars used to think TiO 2 belongs to one of the most stable photoanode materials. So I carried out the first long term photostability measurement on various phases TiO 2 photoanodes including rutile, anatase and mixed phased and found TiO 2 photoanodes were not stable as people expected. Then I investigated the mechanism of the instability of TiO2 and carried out two strategies to stabilize TiO2 materials in the PEC cell. Finally, I created a facile acid treated method on hematite to substantially enhance the PEC activity. I found the enhanced photocurrent is due to improved efficiency of charge separation as well as potential passivation of surface electron traps.




Metal Oxide Semiconductors


Book Description

Metal Oxide Semiconductors Up-to-date resource highlighting highlights emerging applications of metal oxide semiconductors in various areas and current challenges and directions in commercialization Metal Oxide Semiconductors provides a current understanding of oxide semiconductors, covering fundamentals, synthesizing methods, and applications in diodes, thin-film transistors, gas sensors, solar cells, and more. The text presents state-of-the-art information along with fundamental prerequisites for understanding and discusses the current challenges in pursuing commercialization and future directions of this field. Despite rapid advancements in the materials science and device physics of oxide semiconductors over the past decade, the understanding of science and technology in this field remains incomplete due to its relatively short research history; this book aims to bridge the gap between the rapidly advancing research progress in this field and the demand for relevant materials and devices by researchers, engineers, and students. Written by three highly qualified authors, Metal Oxide Semiconductors discusses sample topics such as: Fabrication techniques and principles, covering vacuum-based methods, including sputtering, atomic layer deposition and evaporation, and solution-based methods Fundamentals, progresses, and potentials of p–n heterojunction diodes, Schottky diodes, metal-insulator-semiconductor diodes, and self-switching diodes Applications in thin-film transistors, detailing the current progresses and challenges towards commercialization for n-type TFTs, p-type TFTs, and circuits Detailed discussions on the working mechanisms and representative devices of oxide-based gas sensors, pressure sensors, and PH sensors Applications in optoelectronics, both in solar cells and ultraviolet photodetectors, covering their parameters, materials, and performance Memory applications, including resistive random-access memory, transistor-structured memory devices, transistor-structured artificial synapse, and optical memory transistors A comprehensive monograph covering all aspects of oxide semiconductors, Metal Oxide Semiconductors is an essential resource for materials scientists, electronics engineers, semiconductor physicists, and professionals in the semiconductor and sensor industries who wish to understand all modern developments that have been made in the field.




Flame Synthesis and Doping of Metal Oxide Nanowires and Their Application in Solar Water Splitting


Book Description

Considering the increasing energy and environmental problems associated with the exhaustible fossil fuels, renewable energy conversion devices have attracted tremendous attention, which hold the promise to supply the fuel and electricity in a sustainable way. For many of these devices, such as batteries, fuel cells, solar cells and solar water splitting cells, metal oxides are very important functional materials due to their earth abundance, good stability and diverse properties. Recently nanowire-based metal oxides have enabled revolutionary advances in various energy conversion devices, because of their unique physical and chemical properties resulting from the high aspect ratio and large surface area. Despite their advantages, practical applications of metal oxide nanowires are hindered, as conventional synthesis methods have limitations for large scale production. Flame synthesis can potentially solve this large-scale production issue for metal oxide nanowires, given its demonstrated scalability in the industrial production of nanoparticles. However, only until very recently has flame synthesis been applied to metal oxide nanowires. More research is needed to develop advanced flame synthesis method for metal oxide nanowires, to understand the mechanism to well control the size, shape and compositions for reliable manufacture, and to evaluate their quality and functionalities in real devices. This thesis presents a novel flame vapor deposition method for the synthesis of metal oxide nanowires with the capabilities of rapid rate, good uniformity over large area and broad substrate choice. Through the investigation of growth mechanism, good control over the morphology and composition was achieved by tuning the process parameters such as fuel/air ratio, source temperature, substrate material and temperature. In addition to synthesis, flame-based doping method (sol-flame doping) was innovated for controllable doping of metal oxide NWs to modify the properties of host materials at the nanometer scale. This sol-flame doping method not only preserves the morphology and crystallinity of the host NWs, but also allows fine control over the dopant concentration by simply varying the concentration of dopant precursor solution. With this method, significant enhancement of the electrocatalytic activity towards oxygen evolution reaction was achieved for TiO2 NWs (up to 760 mV reduction of the overpotential), attributing to simultaneously improved surface charge transfer kinetics and increased bulk conductivity by doping. Finally, the flame-synthesized metal oxide nanowires were implemented as a photoanode in photoelectrochemical water splitting. By rational design and scalable fabrication, the WO3/BiVO4/Ni:FeOOH composite nanowire photoanode generated a high photocurrent of 4.5 mA/cm2 at a potential of 1.23 VRHE under simulated sunlight, which is among the highest produced by any WO3/BiVO4 based photoanodes. With the demonstrated rapid rate, good controllability and superior performance of the flame-produced metal oxide nanowires, these flame synthesis and doping methods can potentially enable future generation of energy devices by removing the barrier for large-scale production of tailored metal oxide nanowires.




Metal Oxides for Next-generation Optoelectronic, Photonic, and Photovoltaic Applications


Book Description

Metal Oxides for Next Generation Optoelectronic, Photonic and Photovoltaic Applications focuses on the optoelectronic, photonic and photovoltaic behaviors of metallic oxides and closely related phenomena, from elementary principles to the latest findings. Each chapter includes a comprehensive evaluation of the synthesis and characterization of the most relevant metal oxides nanostructures for each application. In addition, there is a focus on methods to tune the materials’ properties in order to improve devices performance. This book is suitable for researchers and practitioners in academia and industry working in the disciplines of materials science and engineering, chemistry and physics. Metal oxides are widely used in various optoelectronic devices, photonics, display devices, smart windows, sensors, optical components, energy-saving, and harvesting devices. Each application requires materials with their own specific properties. By controlling the particle size, shape, crystal structure, one can tune various properties of metal oxides viz. bandgap, absorption properties, conductivity, which alter the material for the specific application. Includes discussions of synthesis and characterization of metal oxides materials for applications in next-generation optoelectronic, photonic and photovoltaic devices Emphasizes material design strategies of metal oxide nanostructures Focuses on the optoelectronic, photonic and photovoltaic behaviors of metallic oxides and closely related phenomena, from elementary principles to the latest findings




Electrochemical water splitting based on metal oxide composite nanostructures


Book Description

The occurrence of available energy reservoirs is decreasing steeply, therefore we are looking for an alternative and sustainable renewable energy resources. Among them, hydrogen is considered as green fuel with a high density of energy. In nature, hydrogen is not found in a free state and it is most likely present in the compound form for example H2O. Water covers almost 75% of the earth planet. To produce hydrogen from water, it requires an efficient catalyst. For this purpose, noble materials such as Pt, Ir, and Ru are efficient materials for water splitting. These precious catalysts are rare in nature, very costly, and are restricted from largescale applications. Therefore, search for a new earth-abundant and nonprecious materials is a hot spot area in the research today. Among the materials, nanomaterials are excellent candidates because of their potential properties for extended applications, particularly in energy systems. The fabrication of nanostructured materials with high specific surface area, fast charge transport, rich catalytic sites, and huge ion transport is the key challenge for turning nonprecious materials into precious catalytic materials. In this thesis, we have investigated nonprecious nanostructured materials and they are found to be efficient for electrochemical water splitting. These nanostructured materials include MoS2-TiO2, MoS2, TiO2, MoSx@NiO, NiO, nickeliron layered double hydroxide (NiFeLDH)/Co3O4, NiFeLDH, Co3O4, Cu-doped MoS2, Co3O4- CuO, CuO, etc. The composition, morphology, crystalline structure, and phase purities are investigated by a wide range of analytical instruments such as XPS, SEM, HRTEM, and XRD. The production of hydrogen/oxygen from water is obtained either in the acidic or alkaline media. Based on the functional characterization we believe that these newly produced nanostructured materials can be capitalized for the development of water splitting, batteries, and other energy-related devices.