posted on 2014-07-31, 00:00authored byJohn R. Swierk, Nicholas S. McCool, Timothy P. Saunders, Greg D. Barber, Megan E. Strayer, Nella M. Vargas-Barbosa, Thomas E. Mallouk
Water-splitting dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells (WS-DSPECs)
utilize high surface area TiO2 electrodes functionalized
with light absorbing sensitizers and water oxidation catalysts. Because
water splitting requires vectorial electron transfer from the catalyst
to the sensitizer to the TiO2 surface, attaching both sensitizer
and catalyst to TiO2 in the correct sequence and stabilizing
them under photoelectrochemical conditions has been a challenging
problem. Rutile-phase IrO2 nanoparticles can be deposited
directly on the TiO2 electrode by adsorbing citrate-capped
amorphous IrOx and then sintering at 450
°C. Electrodes functionalized with these nanocrystalline particles
show higher activity than those made from ligand-capped amorphous
IrOx without sintering. In the WS-DSPEC,
the Coulombic efficiency for oxygen evolution from the sintered nanoparticle
photoelectrodes was near unity. The loading of colloidal IrOx and IrO2 particles onto the porous TiO2 electrodes was quantified by neutron activation analysis.
Photovoltage measurements suggest that at high catalyst loading the
dominant charge recombination pathway is from photoinjected electrons
to IrO2.