Understanding the reaction mechanism and kinetics of photocatalytic oxygen evolution on CoOx-loaded bismuth vanadate

Author:

Matsumoto Yoshiyasu1ORCID,Nagatsuka Kengo2ORCID,Yamaguchi Yuichi23ORCID,Kudo Akihiko23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Toyota Physical and Chemical Research Institute 1 , Nagakute, Aichi 480-1192, Japan

2. Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Tokyo University of Science 2 , Tokyo 162-8601, Japan

3. Carbon Value Research Center, Research Institute for Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science 3 , Noda, Chiba 278-8510, Japan

Abstract

Photocatalytic water splitting for green hydrogen production is hindered by the sluggish kinetics of oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Loading a co-catalyst is essential for accelerating the kinetics, but the detailed reaction mechanism and role of the co-catalyst are still obscure. Here, we focus on cobalt oxide (CoOx) loaded on bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) to investigate the impact of CoOx on the OER mechanism. We employ photoelectrochemical impedance spectroscopy and simultaneous measurements of photoinduced absorption and photocurrent. The reduction of V5+ in BiVO4 promotes the formation of a surface state on CoOx that plays a crucial role in the OER. The third-order reaction rate with respect to photohole charge density indicates that reaction intermediate species accumulate in the surface state through a three-electron oxidation process prior to the rate-determining step. Increasing the excitation light intensity onto the CoOx-loaded anode improves the photoconversion efficiency significantly, suggesting that the OER reaction at dual sites in an amorphous CoOx(OH)y layer dominates over single sites. Therefore, CoOx is directly involved in the OER by providing effective reaction sites, stabilizing reaction intermediates, and improving the charge transfer rate. These insights help advance our understanding of co-catalyst-assisted OER to achieve efficient water splitting.

Funder

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy

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