High-performance solar-water-splitting technologies are
of paramount
interest for the cost-effective generation of hydrogen fuel; however,
their realization is majorly limited by the poor solar light absorption
and charge separation inside photoanode semiconductors. Herein, we
develop photoanodes made from polycrystalline tantalum nitride nanorods
(Ta3N5 NRs) to overcome the above-mentioned
challenges. The morphology and crystalline properties of Ta3N5 NRs are optimized by tuning essential parameters of
glancing angle deposition and nitridation techniques, respectively.
Under a simulated AM1.5G solar spectrum, the photoanodes demonstrate
a tremendous gain in photocurrent from 1.54 mA cm–2 to 10.96 mA cm–2 at 1.23 V versus reversible hydrogen
electrode for water oxidation activity. Photoluminescence, transient
diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, and theoretical analyses identify
prominent factors (like charge carrier lifetime, diffusion length,
etc.) responsible for the enhanced performance. Our work presents
the significance of designing the narrow-energy band-gap photoanodes
with broad implications toward efficient solar-water-splitting devices
for green hydrogen production.