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Large-area CVD MoS2/WS2 heterojunctions as a photoelectrocatalyst for salt water oxidation
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Splitting salt water via sunlight into molecular oxygen and hydrogen for use as fuel or as an energy carrier is a clear pathway toward renewable energy. Monolayer MoS2 and WS2 are promising materials for the energetically demanding water oxidation reaction, absorbing ∼10% of incident light in the visible spectrum and possessing chemical stability and band edges more positive than the oxidation potential of water. A heterostructure of MoS2/WS2 forms a type-II heterojunction, supporting fast separation of the photogenerated charge carriers across the junction. Here, we show the role played by defects in determining the efficiency of the photon-driven oxidation process. By reducing the defects in this material system, it is possible to obtain an incident photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE) of ∼1.6% and a visible-light-driven photocurrent density of 1.7 mA/cm2 for water oxidation. The efficiency is one order of magnitude higher than that of photoelectrocatalytic hydrogen reduction and water oxidation supported by liquid-phase exfoliated transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). This result has been achieved with chemically vapor deposited (CVD) MoS2/WS2 heterojunctions, in the form of 100 μm large flakes assembled to form thin films. The large flakes sizes, compared to liquid-phase exfoliated materials (normally
- Subjects :
- Technology
Materials science
heterojunctions
Hydrogen
Materials Science
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
chemistry.chemical_element
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
WS2
water splitting
Catalysis
photoanodes
Monolayer
Materials Chemistry
Electrochemistry
HETEROSTRUCTURES
Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous)
CATALYTIC-ACTIVITY
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Energy carrier
Science & Technology
business.industry
Heterojunction
NANOSHEETS
EVOLUTION
Renewable energy
Chemical engineering
chemistry
photoelectrocatalysis
Salt water
DISULFIDE
Water splitting
GROWTH
PHOTOOXIDATION
business
MoS2
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a7891a9f433b5c66ef7a0d54cfbe0ef4