articleScienceFeb 14, 2014Closed access

Nanoporous BiVO 4 Photoanodes with Dual-Layer Oxygen Evolution Catalysts for Solar Water Splitting

University of Wisconsin–Madison

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) has a band structure that is well-suited for potential use as a photoanode in solar water splitting, but it suffers from poor electron-hole separation. Here, we demonstrate that a nanoporous morphology (specific surface area of 31.8 square meters per gram) effectively suppresses bulk carrier recombination without additional doping, manifesting an electron-hole separation yield of 0.90 at 1.23 volts (V) versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). We enhanced the propensity for surface-reaching holes to instigate water-splitting chemistry by serially applying two different oxygen evolution catalyst (OEC) layers, FeOOH and NiOOH, which reduces interface recombination at the BiVO4/OEC…

Citation impact

3,099
total citations
FWCI
93.49
Percentile
100%
References
42
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Bismuth vanadate
  • Oxygen evolution
  • Water splitting
  • Photoexcitation
  • Catalysis
  • Vanadium
  • Materials science
  • Vanadate
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Clean water and sanitation
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