Photocarrier
recombination dynamics of BiVO4 powders
synthesized at different temperatures were studied by temperature-dependent
steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL). Structural
analysis indicates that BiVO4 materials synthesized at
low temperatures contain mixed-phase crystals including monoclinic
and tetragonal scheelite phase, showing poor photocatalytic performance.
Relatively higher synthesis temperatures improve the photocatalyst
efficiency by promoting the formation of single-phase monoclinic BiVO4 with larger grains. Excitation-power dependence along with
temperature dependence of the PL of BiVO4 suggests that
the donor-to-acceptor transitions are the dominant radiative recombination
mechanism. Furthermore, hole effective lifetimes observed in PL decays
were found in the order of nanoseconds, which is far behind the ideal
radiative lifetime of ∼6 μs, calculated theoretically
using van Roosbroeck-Shockley relation. This suggests that the photocarrier
recombination in BiVO4 occurs predominately nonradiatively
via multiphonon emission, plausibly through deep-level defects. In
addition, the coexistence of tetragonal and monoclinic phases might
indirectly induce additional trap states, leading to an increase of
the nonradiative recombination rate and subsequently poor photocatalytic
efficiency in samples synthesized at lower temperatures. Thus, the
nonradiative recombination which is associated with a short photocarrier
lifetime and small holes diffusion length is the most limiting process
for BiVO4 performance.
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