Catalytic water splitting to hydrogen and oxygen is considered as one of the convenient routes for the sustainable energy conversion. Bifunctional catalysts for the electrocatalytic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) are pivotal for the energy conversion and storage, and alternatively, the photochemical water oxidation in biomimetic fashion is also considered as the most useful way to convert solar energy into chemical energy. Here we present a facile solvothermal route to control the synthesis of amorphous and crystalline cobalt iron oxides by controlling the crystallinity of the materials with changing solvent and reaction time and further utilize these materials as multifunctional catalysts for the unification of photochemical and electrochemical water oxidation as well as for the oxygen reduction reaction. Notably, the amorphous cobalt iron oxide produces superior catalytic activity over the crystalline one under photochemical and electrochemical water oxidation and oxygen reduction conditions.
A systematic structural
elucidation of the near-surface active
species of the two remarkably active nickel phosphides Ni12P5 and Ni2P on the basis of extensive analytical,
microscopic, and spectroscopic investigations is reported. The latter
can serve as complementary efficient electrocatalysts in the hydrogen
(HER) versus oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline media. In
the OER Ni12P5 shows enhanced performance over
Ni2P due to the higher concentration of nickel in this
phase, which enables the formation of an amorphous NiOOH/Ni(OH)2 shell on a modified multiphase with a disordered phosphide/phosphite
core. The situation is completely reversed in the HER, where Ni2P displayed a significant improvement in electrocatalytic
activity over Ni12P5 owing to a larger concentration
of phosphide/phosphate species in the shell. Moreover, the efficiently
combined use of the two nickel phosphide phases deposited on nickel
foam in overall electrocatalytic water splitting is demonstrated by
a strikingly low cell voltage and high stability with pronounced current
density, and these catalysts could be an apt choice for applications
in commercial alkaline water electrolysis.
Nanostructured titanium dioxide is one of the classic materials for photoelectrochemical water splitting. In the present work we dope TiO(2) nanotube anodes. For this, various low concentration bulk-Nb-doped TiO(2) nanotube layers were grown by self-organizing anodization of Ti-Nb alloys. At Nb-contents around 0.1 at%, and after an adequate heat-treatment, a strongly increased and stable photoelectrochemical water-splitting rate is obtained.
In this work, solar cells with a freshly made CH NH PbI perovskite film showed a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 15.4 % whereas the one with 50 days aged perovskite film only 6.1 %. However, when the aged perovskite was covered with a layer of Al O deposited by atomic layer deposition (ALD) at room temperature (RT), the PCE value was clearly enhanced. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy study showed that the ALD precursors are chemically active only at the perovskite surface and passivate it. Moreover, the RT-ALD-Al O -covered perovskite films showed enhanced ambient air stability.
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