Wireless Solar Water Splitting Using Silicon-Based Semiconductors and Earth-Abundant Catalysts
Catalytic Materials (United States) · Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics · +1 more institution
Abstract
We describe the development of solar water-splitting cells comprising earth-abundant elements that operate in near-neutral pH conditions, both with and without connecting wires. The cells consist of a triple junction, amorphous silicon photovoltaic interfaced to hydrogen- and oxygen-evolving catalysts made from an alloy of earth-abundant metals and a cobalt|borate catalyst, respectively. The devices described here carry out the solar-driven water-splitting reaction at efficiencies of 4.7% for a wired configuration and 2.5% for a wireless configuration when illuminated with 1 sun (100 milliwatts per square centimeter) of air mass 1.5 simulated sunlight. Fuel-forming catalysts interfaced with light-harvesting…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 62.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Earth (classical element)
- Semiconductor
- Silicon
- Water splitting
- Catalysis
- Materials science
- Wireless
- Optoelectronics