Improving the efficiency of water splitting in dye-sensitized solar cells by using a biomimetic electron transfer mediator

Photoelectrochemical water splitting directly converts solar energy to chemical energy stored in hydrogen, a high energy density fuel. Although water splitting using semiconductor photoelectrodes has been studied for more than 40 years, it has only recently been demonstrated using dye-sensitized ele...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2012-09, Vol.109 (39), p.15612-15616
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Yixin, Swierk, John R, Megiatto, Jackson D, Sherman, Benjamin, Youngblood, W. Justin, Qin, Dongdong, Lentz, Deanna M, Moore, Ana L, Moore, Thomas A, Gust, Devens, Mallouk, Thomas E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Photoelectrochemical water splitting directly converts solar energy to chemical energy stored in hydrogen, a high energy density fuel. Although water splitting using semiconductor photoelectrodes has been studied for more than 40 years, it has only recently been demonstrated using dye-sensitized electrodes. The quantum yield for water splitting in these dye-based systems has, so far, been very low because the charge recombination reaction is faster than the catalytic four-electron oxidation of water to oxygen. We show here that the quantum yield is more than doubled by incorporating an electron transfer mediator that is mimetic of the tyrosine-histidine mediator in Photosystem II. The mediator molecule is covalently bound to the water oxidation catalyst, a colloidal iridium oxide particle, and is coadsorbed onto a porous titanium dioxide electrode with a Ruthenium polypyridyl sensitizer. As in the natural photosynthetic system, this molecule mediates electron transfer between a relatively slow metal oxide catalyst that oxidizes water on the millisecond timescale and a dye molecule that is oxidized in a fast light-induced electron transfer reaction. The presence of the mediator molecule in the system results in photoelectrochemical water splitting with an internal quantum efficiency of approximately 2.3% using blue light.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1118339109