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 Photocatalyst that can Split Water into Hydrogen and oxygen at a Quantum Efficiency Close to 100% - FuelCellsWorks
 By FuelCellsWorks
 
 fuelcellsworks.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 A  research team led by Shinshu University’s Tsuyoshi Takata, Takashi  Hisatomi and Kazunari Domen succeeded in developing a photocatalyst that  can split water into hydrogen and oxygen at a quantum efficiency close  to 100%.
 
 The team consisted of their colleagues from Yamaguchi University, The  University of Tokyo and National Institute of Advanced Industrial  Science and Technology (AIST).
 
 The team produced an ideal photocatalyst structure composed of  semiconductor particles and cocatalysts. H2 and O2 evolution cocatalysts  were selectively photodeposited on different facets of crystalline  SrTiO3(Al-doped) particles due to anisotropic charge transport. This  photocatalyst structure effectively prevented charge recombination  losses, reaching the upper limit of quantum efficiency.
 
 
 
  
 Figure  1 – Schematic structure (a) and scanning electron microscope image (b)  of Al-doped SrTiO3 site-selectively coloaded with a hydrogen evolution  cocatalyst (Rh/Cr2O3) and an oxygen evolution cocatalyst (CoOOH).
 
 Water splitting reaction driven by solar energy is a technology for  producing renewable solar hydrogen on a large scale. To put such  technology to practical use, the production cost of solar hydrogen must  be significantly reduced [1]. This requires the reaction system that can  split water efficiently and can be scaled up easily. A system  consisting of particulate semiconductor photocatalysts can be expanded  over a large area with relatively simple processes. Therefore, it will  make great strides toward large-scale solar hydrogen production if  photocatalysts driving the sunlight-driven water splitting reaction with  high efficiency are developed.
 
 To upgrade the solar energy conversion efficiency of photocatalytic  water splitting, it is necessary to improve two factors: widening the  wavelength range of light used by the photocatalyst for the reaction  and increasing the quantum yield at each wavelength. The former is  determined by the bandgap of the photocatalyst material used, and the  latter is determined by the quality of the photocatalyst material and  the functionality of the cocatalyst used to promote the reaction.  However, photocatalytic water splitting is an endergonic reaction  involving multi-electron transfer occurring in a non-equilibrium state.
 
 This study refined the design and operating principle for advancing  water splitting methods with a high quantum efficiency. The knowledge  obtained in this study will propel the field of photocatalytic water  splitting further to enable the scalable solar hydrogen production.
 
 The project was made possible through the support of NEDO (New Energy  and Industrial Technology Development Organization) under the  “Artificial photosynthesis project”.
 
 Title: Photocatalytic water splitting with a quantum efficiency of almost unity
 Authors:Tsuyoshi Takata, Junzhe Jiang, Yoshihisa Sakata, Mamiko  Nakabayashi, Naoya Shibata, Vikas Nandal, Kazuhiko Seki, Takashi  Hisatomi, Kazunari Domen
 Journal:Nature, 581, 411-414 (2020)
 DOI10.1038/s41586-020-2278-9
 
 
 
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