Impact of Hole Scavengers on Efficient Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production

Author:

Augustin Ashil1,Ganguly Priyanka2,Shenoy Sulakshana3,Chuaicham Chitiphon34,Pillai Suresh C.5,Sasaki Keiko34,Lee Adam F.6,Sekar Karthikeyan13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sustainable Energy and Environmental Research Laboratory Department of Chemistry Faculty of Engineering and Technology SRM Institute of Science and Technology Kattankulathur 603203 India

2. School of Human Sciences London Metropolitan University London N7 8DB UK

3. Department of Earth Resources Engineering Faculty of Engineering Kyushu University 744 Motooka Nishiku Fukuoka 819‐0395 Japan

4. Faculty of Science and Engineering Waseda University Okubo 3‐4‐1, Shinjukuku Tokyo 169‐0072 Japan

5. Nanotechnology and Bio‐Engineering Research Group Department of Environmental Science Atlantic Technological University ATU Sligo, Ash Lane Sligo F91 YW50 Ireland

6. Centre for Catalysis and Clean Energy School of Environment and Science Griffith University Southport QLD 4222 Australia

Abstract

AbstractHydrogen is one of the most promising alternative energy resources to replace fossil feedstocks, with so‐called “green” hydrogen, derived by water splitting (WS) using renewable electricity or sunlight, the most sustainable. Photocatalytic hydrogen production, in which sunlight is the sole energy input, has been extensively studied, and requires the creation of photogenerated excitons (through irradiation of semiconductors) and their transport to aqueous media. Chemical scavengers, notably electron donating molecules, are widely used to quench photogenerated holes and thereby suppress exciton recombination which otherwise limits the hydrogen yield. Despite their prevalence, the role and significance of such scavengers (also termed sacrificial agents) in photocatalytic WS remains poorly understood, hindering their rational selection. This review focuses on the importance of electron donors in photocatalytic WS, and their participation in the reaction mechanism.

Funder

Science Foundation Ireland

Foundation for Promotion of Material Science and Technology of Japan

Royal Society

Publisher

Wiley

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