Design principles for maximizing photovoltage in metal-oxide-protected water-splitting photoanodes


Autoria(s): Scheuermann, Andrew G.; Lawrence, John P.; Kemp, Kyle W.; Ito, T.; Walsh, Adrian; Chidsey, Christopher E. D.; Hurley, Paul K.; McIntyre, Paul C.
Data(s)

01/12/2016

01/12/2016

01/01/2016

01/12/2016

Resumo

Metal oxide protection layers for photoanodes may enable the development of large-scale solar fuel and solar chemical synthesis, but the poor photovoltages often reported so far will severely limit their performance. Here we report a novel observation of photovoltage loss associated with a charge extraction barrier imposed by the protection layer, and, by eliminating it, achieve photovoltages as high as 630mV, the maximum reported so far for water-splitting silicon photoanodes. The loss mechanism is systematically probed in metal-insulator-semiconductor Schottky junction cells compared to buried junction p(+) n cells, revealing the need to maintain a characteristic hole density at the semiconductor/insulator interface. A leaky-capacitor model related to the dielectric properties of the protective oxide explains this loss, achieving excellent agreement with the data. From these findings, we formulate design principles for simultaneous optimization of built-in field, interface quality, and hole extraction to maximize the photovoltage of oxide-protected water-splitting anodes.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Scheuermann, Andrew G.; Lawrence, John P.; Kemp, Kyle W.; Ito, T.; Walsh, Adrian; Chidsey, Christopher E. D.; Hurley, Paul K.; McIntyre, Paul C. (2016) 'Design principles for maximizing photovoltage in metal-oxide-protected water-splitting photoanodes'. Nature Materials, 15, 99-105. doi: 10.1038/NMAT4451

15

99

105

1476-1122

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/3339

10.1038/NMAT4451

Nature Materials

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v15/n1/full/nmat4451.html

Palavras-Chave #Open-circuit voltage #Silicon solar-cells #Photoelectrochemical cells #Oxidation #Layer #Efficient #TiO2 #Performance #Conversion #Thickness
Tipo

Article (peer-reviewed)