Interfacial engineering of metal-insulator-semiconductor junctions for efficient and stable photoelectrochemical water oxidation

Ibadillah A. Digdaya, Gede W.P. Adhyaksa, B.J. Trzesniewski, Erik C. Garnett, Wilson A. Smith*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

166 Citations (Scopus)
92 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Solar-assisted water splitting can potentially provide an efficient route for large-scale renewable energy conversion and storage. It is essential for such a system to provide a sufficiently high photocurrent and photovoltage to drive the water oxidation reaction. Here we demonstrate a photoanode that is capable of achieving a high photovoltage by engineering the interfacial energetics of metal-insulator-semiconductor junctions. We evaluate the importance of using two metals to decouple the functionalities for a Schottky contact and a highly efficient catalyst. We also illustrate the improvement of the photovoltage upon incidental oxidation of the metallic surface layer in KOH solution. Additionally, we analyse the role of the thin insulating layer to the pinning and depinning of Fermi level that is responsible to the resulting photovoltage. Finally, we report the advantage of using dual metal overlayers as a simple protection route for highly efficient metal-insulator-semiconductor photoanodes by showing over 200 h of operational stability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number15968
Pages (from-to)1-8
Number of pages8
JournalNature Communications
Volume8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Jun 2017

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