Back to Search
Start Over
Hydrogen evolution from a copper(I) oxide photocathode coated with an amorphous molybdenum sulphide catalyst
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Concerns over climate change resulting from accumulation of anthropogenic carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the uncertainty in the amount of recoverable fossil fuel reserves are driving forces for the development of renewable, carbon-neutral energy technologies. A promising clean solution is photoelectrochemical water splitting to produce hydrogen using abundant solar energy. Here we present a simple and scalable technique for the deposition of amorphous molybdenum sulphide films as hydrogen evolution catalyst onto protected copper(I) oxide films. The efficient extraction of excited electrons by the conformal catalyst film leads to photocurrents of up to -5.7 mA cm(-2) at 0 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode (pH 1.0) under simulated AM 1.5 solar illumination. Furthermore, the photocathode exhibits enhanced stability under acidic environments, whereas photocathodes with platinum nanoparticles as catalyst deactivate more rapidly under identical conditions. The work demonstrates the potential of earth-abundant light-harvesting material and catalysts for solar hydrogen production.
- Subjects :
- 10120 Department of Chemistry
Materials science
Copper(I) oxide
Hydrogen
material sciences
Catalyst support
Oxide
General Physics and Astronomy
chemistry.chemical_element
1600 General Chemistry
7. Clean energy
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
chemistry.chemical_compound
1300 General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
540 Chemistry
chemical sciences
Multidisciplinary
catalysis
General Chemistry
inorganic chemistry
Copper
3100 General Physics and Astronomy
Amorphous solid
Chemical engineering
chemistry
13. Climate action
Molybdenum
Water splitting
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1f446b85b60804faca1792de6e81b33d