Publication | Open Access
Carbon-Layer-Protected Cuprous Oxide Nanowire Arrays for Efficient Water Reduction
422
Citations
57
References
2013
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringCopper Oxide MaterialsEfficient Water ReductionEngineeringNanoporous MaterialNanomaterialsNanotechnologyEnergy ConversionProtective CarbonCarbon-based MaterialCarbon LayerPhoto-electrochemical CellChemistryWater SplittingNano ApplicationPhotoelectrochemistry
The study proposes a solution‑based carbon precursor coating and carbonization strategy to protect unstable semiconductor nanostructures from photocorrosion. Using glucose as the precursor, the authors carbonize a thin protective layer onto cuprous oxide nanowire arrays synthesized from copper mesh. The carbon‑layer‑protected Cu₂O nanowires exhibit markedly improved photostability and photocurrent density, achieving a record −3.95 mA cm⁻² photocurrent and 0.56 % efficiency at a 20 nm coating, with stability rising from 12.6 % to 80.7 % over 20 min, demonstrating the strategy’s effectiveness for stable, high‑performance photoelectrodes.
In this work, we propose a solution-based carbon precursor coating and subsequent carbonization strategy to form a thin protective carbon layer on unstable semiconductor nanostructures as a solution to the commonly occurring photocorrosion problem of many semiconductors. A proof-of-concept is provided by using glucose as the carbon precursor to form a protective carbon coating onto cuprous oxide (Cu₂O) nanowire arrays which were synthesized from copper mesh. The carbon-layer-protected Cu₂O nanowire arrays exhibited remarkably improved photostability as well as considerably enhanced photocurrent density. The Cu₂O nanowire arrays coated with a carbon layer of 20 nm thickness were found to give an optimal water splitting performance, producing a photocurrent density of -3.95 mA cm⁻² and an optimal photocathode efficiency of 0.56% under illumination of AM 1.5G (100 mW cm⁻²). This is the highest value ever reported for a Cu₂O-based electrode coated with a metal/co-catalyst-free protective layer. The photostability, measured as the percentage of the photocurrent density at the end of 20 min measurement period relative to that at the beginning of the measurement, improved from 12.6% on the bare, nonprotected Cu₂O nanowire arrays to 80.7% on the continuous carbon coating protected ones, more than a 6-fold increase. We believe that the facile strategy presented in this work is a general approach that can address the stability issue of many nonstable photoelectrodes and thus has the potential to make a meaningful contribution in the general field of energy conversion.
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