Codoping titanium dioxide nanowires with tungsten and carbon for enhanced photoelectrochemical performance

Recent density-functional theory calculations suggest that codoping TiO 2 with donor–acceptor pairs is more effective than monodoping for improving photoelectrochemical water-splitting performance because codoping can reduce charge recombination, improve material quality, enhance light absorption an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2013-04, Vol.4 (1), p.1723-1723, Article 1723
Hauptverfasser: Cho, In Sun, Lee, Chi Hwan, Feng, Yunzhe, Logar, Manca, Rao, Pratap M., Cai, Lili, Kim, Dong Rip, Sinclair, Robert, Zheng, Xiaolin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent density-functional theory calculations suggest that codoping TiO 2 with donor–acceptor pairs is more effective than monodoping for improving photoelectrochemical water-splitting performance because codoping can reduce charge recombination, improve material quality, enhance light absorption and increase solubility limits of dopants. Here we report a novel ex-situ method to codope TiO 2 with tungsten and carbon (W, C) by sequentially annealing W-precursor-coated TiO 2 nanowires in flame and carbon monoxide gas. The unique advantages of flame annealing are that the high temperature (>1,000 °C) and fast heating rate of flame enable rapid diffusion of W into TiO 2 without damaging the nanowire morphology and crystallinity. This is the first experimental demonstration that codoped TiO 2 :(W, C) nanowires outperform monodoped TiO 2 :W and TiO 2 :C and double the saturation photocurrent of undoped TiO 2 for photoelectrochemical water splitting. Such significant performance enhancement originates from a greatly improved electrical conductivity and activity for oxygen-evolution reaction due to the synergistic effects of codoping. Titanium dioxide nanowires are used as photoanodes in photoelectrochemical water splitting. Here Zheng et al . demonstrate that doping these nanowires with tungsten and carbon atom pairs considerably enhances their performance.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms2729