Affiliation:
1. Chemistry, School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University NE1 7RU UK
2. School of Chemical Sciences, Dublin City University Dublin 9 Ireland
Abstract
Photoelectrocatalysis offers a way to generate hydrogen and oxygen from water under ambient light. Here, a series of hydrogen evolving photocatalysts based on a ruthenium(II) bipyridyl sensitiser covalently linked to platinum or palladium catalytic centres were adsorbed onto mesoporous
nickel oxide and tested for hydrogen evolution in a photoelectrochemical half-cell. The electrolyte buffer was varied and certain catalysts performed better at pH 7 than pH 3 (for example, PC3 with photocurrent density = 8 μA cm‐2), which is encouraging for coupling with
an oxygen evolving photoanode in tandem water splitting devices. The molecular catalysts were surprisingly robust when integrated into devices, but the overall performance appears to be limited by rapid recombination at the photocatalyst|NiO interface. Our findings provide further insight
towards basic design principles for hydrogen evolving photoelectrochemical systems and guidelines for further development.
Subject
Electrochemistry,Metals and Alloys,Process Chemistry and Technology
Cited by
1 articles.
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