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Ultrafast Charge Carrier Dynamics in Vanadium-Modified TiO2Thin Films and Its Relation to Their Photoelectrocatalytic Efficiency for Water Splitting

Authors :
Piccioni, Alberto
Catone, Daniele
Paladini, Alessandra
O’Keeffe, Patrick
Boschi, Alex
Kovtun, Alessandro
Katsikini, Maria
Boscherini, Federico
Pasquini, Luca
Source :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry - Part C; December 2020, Vol. 124 Issue: 49 p26572-26582, 11p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Light absorption and charge transport in oxide semiconductors can be tuned by the introduction, during deposition, of a small quantity of foreign elements, leading to the improvement of the photoelectrocatalytic performance. In this work, both unmodified and vanadium-modified TiO2thin films deposited by radio-frequency magnetron sputtering are investigated as photoanodes for photoelectrochemical water splitting. Following a structural characterization by X-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, photoelectrocatalysis is discussed based on ultrafast transient absorbance spectroscopy measurements. In particular, three different pump wavelengths from UV to the visible range are used (300, 390, and 530 nm) in order to cover the relevant photoactive spectral range of modified TiO2. Incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency spectra show that incorporation of vanadium in TiO2extends water splitting in the visible range up to ≈530 nm, a significant improvement compared to unmodified TiO2that is active only in the UV range ≲390  nm. However, transient absorbance spectroscopy clearly reveals that vanadium accelerates electron–hole recombination upon UV irradiation, resulting in a lower photon-to-current conversion efficiency in the UV spectral range with respect to unmodified TiO2. The new photoelectrocatalytic activity in the visible range is attributed to a V-induced introduction of intragap levels at ≈2.2 eV below the bottom of the conduction band. This is confirmed by long-living transient signals due to electrons photoexcited into the conduction band after visible light (530 nm) pulses. The remaining holes migrate to the semiconductor–electrolyte interface where they are captured by long-lived traps and eventually promote water oxidation under visible light.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19327447 and 19327455
Volume :
124
Issue :
49
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry - Part C
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs54720537
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c06790