Mimicking the Key Functions of Photosystem II in Artificial Photosynthesis for Photoelectrocatalytic Water Splitting

It has been anticipated that learning from nature photosynthesis is a rational and effective way to develop artificial photosynthesis system, but it is still a great challenge. Here, we assembled a photoelectrocatalytic system by mimicking the functions of photosystem II (PSII) with BiVO4 semiconduc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2018-03, Vol.140 (9), p.3250-3256
Hauptverfasser: Ye, Sheng, Ding, Chunmei, Chen, Ruotian, Fan, Fengtao, Fu, Ping, Yin, Heng, Wang, Xiuli, Wang, Zhiliang, Du, Pingwu, Li, Can
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container_end_page 3256
container_issue 9
container_start_page 3250
container_title Journal of the American Chemical Society
container_volume 140
creator Ye, Sheng
Ding, Chunmei
Chen, Ruotian
Fan, Fengtao
Fu, Ping
Yin, Heng
Wang, Xiuli
Wang, Zhiliang
Du, Pingwu
Li, Can
description It has been anticipated that learning from nature photosynthesis is a rational and effective way to develop artificial photosynthesis system, but it is still a great challenge. Here, we assembled a photoelectrocatalytic system by mimicking the functions of photosystem II (PSII) with BiVO4 semiconductor as a light harvester protected by a layered double hydroxide (NiFeLDH) as a hole storage layer, a partially oxidized graphene (pGO) as biomimetic tyrosine for charge transfer, and molecular Co cubane as oxygen evolution complex. The integrated system exhibited an unprecedentedly low onset potential (0.17 V) and a high photocurrent (4.45 mA cm–2), with a 2.0% solar to hydrogen efficiency. Spectroscopic studies revealed that this photoelectrocatalytic system exhibited superiority in charge separation and transfer by benefiting from mimicking the key functions of PSII. The success of the biomimetic strategy opened up new ways for the rational design and assembly of artificial photosynthesis systems for efficient solar-to-fuel conversion.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/jacs.7b10662
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title Mimicking the Key Functions of Photosystem II in Artificial Photosynthesis for Photoelectrocatalytic Water Splitting
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