We use transient absorption spectroscopy and photoelectrochemical methods to study the dynamics of photogenerated holes in BiVO4 for solar water oxidation. The back electron/hole recombination is found to be slow and therefore competes with water oxidation, limiting water oxidation efficiency.
The generation of renewable H2 through an efficient
photochemical route requires photoinduced electron transfer (ET) from
a light harvester to an efficient electrocatalyst in water. Here,
we report on a molecular H2 evolution catalyst (NiP) with a DuBois-type [Ni(P2R′N2R″)2]2+ core (P2R′N2R″ = bis(1,5-R′-diphospha-3,7-R″-diazacyclooctane),
which contains an outer coordination sphere with phosphonic acid groups.
The latter functionality allows for good solubility in water and immobilization
on metal oxide semiconductors. Electrochemical studies confirm that NiP is a highly active electrocatalyst in aqueous electrolyte
solution (overpotential of approximately 200 mV at pH 4.5 with a Faradaic
yield of 85 ± 4%). Photocatalytic experiments and investigations
on the ET kinetics were carried out in combination with a phosphonated
Ru(II) tris(bipyridine) dye (RuP) in homogeneous and
heterogeneous environments. Time-resolved luminescence and transient
absorption spectroscopy studies confirmed that directed ET from RuP to NiP occurs efficiently in all systems
on the nano- to microsecond time scale, through three distinct routes:
reductive quenching of RuP in solution or on the surface
of ZrO2 (“on particle” system) or oxidative
quenching of RuP when the compounds were immobilized
on TiO2 (“through particle” system). Our
studies show that NiP can be used in a purely aqueous
solution and on a semiconductor surface with a high degree of versatility.
A high TOF of 460 ± 60 h–1 with a TON of 723
± 171 for photocatalytic H2 generation with a molecular
Ni catalyst in water and a photon-to-H2 quantum yield of
approximately 10% were achieved for the homogeneous system.
The development of synthetic systems for the conversion of solar energy into chemical fuels is a research goal that continues to attract growing interest owing to its potential to provide renewable and storable energy in the form of a 'solar fuel'. Dye-sensitised photocatalysis (DSP) with molecular catalysts is a relatively new approach to convert sunlight into a fuel such as H2 and is based on the self-assembly of a molecular dye and electrocatalyst on a semiconductor nanoparticle. DSP systems combine advantages of both homogenous and heterogeneous photocatalysis, with the molecular components providing an excellent platform for tuning activity and understanding performance at defined catalytic sites, whereas the semiconductor bridge ensures favourable multi-electron transfer kinetics between the dye and the fuel-forming electrocatalyst. In this tutorial review, strategies and challenges for the assembly of functional molecular DSP systems and experimental techniques for their evaluation are explained. Current understanding of the factors governing electron transfer across inorganic-molecular interfaces is described and future directions and challenges for this field are outlined.
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