posted on 2022-10-31, 12:34authored byKazuhiko Seki, Tomohiro Higashi, Yudai Kawase, Kazuhiro Takanabe, Kazunari Domen
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting using Ta3N5 anodes shows a high solar-to-hydrogen (STH)
efficiency
approaching 10%. However, the long-term stability of gas evolution
should be improved for the commercial utilization of PEC water-splitting
technology. Herein, we examined the photocurrent degradation of photoanodes
prepared by uniformly loading a NiFeOx cocatalyst onto a Ta3N5 semiconductor. Although
spectroscopic analysis showed that the degradation was attributable
to the formation of an oxide layer, several oxide growth kinetic laws
and mechanisms are known. We theoretically derived the photocurrent
kinetic laws instead of the oxide growth kinetic laws by generalizing
the Cabrera–Mott oxidation theory of metal oxidation in air
to apply it to photocorrosion. The measured photocurrent kinetics
are fully consistent with the theoretical kinetic laws. We show that
ion drift due to charging of the oxide layer limits oxide growth even
though uniform cocatalyst loading is designed to prevent self-oxidation
of Ta3N5.