Device architectures for photoelectrochemical water splitting based on hematite: a review

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Date

2024-08-21

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Discover Materials

Abstract

Hydrogen production by photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting is a sustainable means that can avert the effects of global warming caused by fossil fuels. For decades, a suitable semiconductor that can absorb solar radiation in the visible region has been a focal research question. Hematite has a theoretical Solar-To-Hydrogen efficiency of 15% which is higher than the 10% benchmark for PEC water splitting. Despite being cheap, chemically stable, and bearing a desired band gap, hematite has not reached this projection due to challenges like band edge mismatch, short hole diffusion length and charge recombination. Various articles have shown hetero-structuring is a reliable solution to some challenges due to enhanced spectral range, enhanced carrier mobility, strong built-in electric field and thus increase in efficiency. However, these articles lack scientific rationale on the performance of hematite and its hetero-structures on different substrates, which is the basis for this review. Our analysis suggests that hetero-structure improves hematite’s PEC performance due to increased spectral range, enhanced carrier mobility and built-in electric field. This review article is organized as follows: a brief PEC background, performance parameters, Physical and Crystallographic properties of hematite, device configurations, performance of hematite and its hetero-structures on different substrates.

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Keywords

Hydrogen production, photoelectrochemical (PEC), water splitting, Hematite

Citation

Nasejje, S., Mukhokosi, E. P., Diale, M., & Velauthapillai, D. (2024). Device architectures for photoelectrochemical water splitting based on hematite: a review. Discover Materials, 4(1), 44.

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