(Invited) Enhancement of Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting and Solar Energy Induced Electroreduction of Carbon Dioxide through Utilization of Plasmonic and Electrocatalytic Metal Nanoparticles

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© 2014 ECS - The Electrochemical Society
, , Citation Sylwia Zoladek et al 2014 ECS Trans. 58 9 DOI 10.1149/05830.0009ecst

1938-5862/58/30/9

Abstract

In the present study, we utilize phosphomolybdate (PMo12O403-) modified gold nanoparticle (diameters, 30-40 nm) deposits on mesoporous tungsten oxide photoanodes to study plasmon-assisted photoelectrochemical water splitting. Such n-type semiconducting oxide as WO3 (band gap, 2.5 eV) suffers from inadequate solar light absorption and, therefore, there is a need to use of a thin plasmon active layer of nanostructured Au of proper architecture to enhance the interfacial light trapping and conversion. A remarkable increase in the solar energy conversion efficiency as well as in the photooxidation current (oxygen evolution) are believed to be induced by the plasmonic excitation of Au nanoparticles occurring within WO3 absorption range. The polyoxometallate (PMo12O403-) monolayer-type nanostructures may play electrocatalytic role, improve charge distribution, in addition to the stabilization effect. In the other study, the PMo12O403- modified Au nanoparticles, when deposited on step-bunched silicon Si(111) surface have also acted as electrocatalytic centers during photoelectrochemically induced reduction of carbon oxide (IV). The applicability of phosphomolybdate-protected gold nanoparticles to create porous matrix for photoelectrochemically assisted reduction of carbon dioxide is even more pronounced when the system is further decorated with copper. We also present the result of decorating multi-walled carbon nanotubes with gold and copper nanoparticles (by chemical reduction method and through electrodeposition) acting as catalytic systems active towards CO2 electroreduction under voltammetric conditions. Carbon nanotubes have been chemically modified here with surface oxygen complexes using HNO3 and H3PMo12O40 solutions.

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10.1149/05830.0009ecst