| A cheap
and easily scalable technique to produce hydrogen from visible light is
close to being a reality.
The
prospect for the wide spread use of hydrogen as a portable energy carrier
is dependent on finding a clean, renewable method of production. At Penn
State University, a research group headed by professor of electrical engineering
Craig Grimes in the Materials Research Institute is “only a couple of problems
away” from developing an inexpensive and easily scalable technique for
water photoelectrolysis - the splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen
using light energy – that could help power the proposed hydrogen economy.
Most current methods of hydrogen
production split hydrogen from natural gas in a process that produces climate
changing greenhouse gas while consuming a nonrenewable resource. A more
environmentally friendly approach would produce hydrogen from water using
the renewable energy of sunlight.
In a paper published online in Nano
Letters on July 3, 2007, lead author Gopal K. Mor, along with Haripriya
E. Prakasam, Oomman K. Varghese, Kathik Shankar, and Grimes, describe the
fabrication of thin films made of self-aligned, vertically oriented titanium
iron oxide (Ti-Fe-O) nanotube arrays that demonstrate the ability to split
water under natural sunlight.
Previously, the Penn State scientists
had reported the development of titania nanotube arrays with a photoconversion
efficiency of 16.5% under ultraviolet light. Titanium oxide (TiO2), which
is commonly used in white paints and sunscreens, has excellent charge-transfer
properties and corrosion stability, making it a likely candidate for cheap
and long lasting solar cells. However, as ultraviolet light contains only
about 5% of the solar spectrum energy, the researchers needed to finds
a means to move the materials band gap into the visible spectrum.
They speculated that by doping the
TiO2 film with a form of iron called hematite, a low band gap semiconductor
material, they could capture a much larger portion of the solar spectrum.
The researchers created Ti-Fe metal films by sputtered titanium and iron
targets on fluorine-doped tin oxide coated glass substrates. The films
were anodized in an ethylene glycol solution and then crystallized by oxygen
annealing for 2 hours. They studied a variety of films of differing thicknesses
and varying iron content. In this paper they report a photocurrent of 2
mA/cm2, and a photoconversion rate of 1.5%, the second highest rate achieved
with an iron oxide related material.
The team is now looking into optimizing
the nanotube architecture to overcome the low electron-hole mobility of
iron. By reducing the wall thickness of the Ti-Fe-O nanotubes to correspond
to the hole diffusion length of iron which is around 4nm, the researchers
hope to reach an efficiency closer to the 12.9% theoretical maximum for
materials with the band gap of hematite.
“As I see it, we are a couple of
problems away from having something that will revolutionize the field of
hydrogen generation by use of solar energy,” Grimes says.
The Materials Research Institute
supports interdisciplinary materials research at Penn State, with more
than 200 faculty, 800 graduate students, and 200 post doctoral researchers
engaged in ground-breaking research in advanced materials. Visit us at
http://www.mri.psu.edu
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