Progress in bismuth vanadate photoanodes for use in solar water oxidation
University of Wisconsin–Madison · Purdue University West Lafayette
Abstract
Harvesting energy directly from sunlight as nature accomplishes through photosynthesis is a very attractive and desirable way to solve the energy challenge. Many efforts have been made to find appropriate materials and systems that can utilize solar energy to produce chemical fuels. One of the most viable options is the construction of a photoelectrochemical cell that can reduce water to H(2) or CO(2) to carbon-based molecules. Bismuth vanadate (BiVO(4)) has recently emerged as a promising material for use as a photoanode that oxidizes water to O(2) in these cells. Significant advancement in the understanding and construction of efficient BiVO(4)-based photoanode systems has been made within a short period of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.49
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 102
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Bismuth vanadate
- Bismuth
- Nanotechnology
- Photoelectrochemical cell
- Oxygen evolution
- Water splitting
- Solar energy
- Materials science
- Affordable and clean energy