Solar hydrogen: Let’s consider the stability of photoelectrodes

Scalable large area BiVO<sub>4</sub> photoanode on FTO with Ni current collectors.

Scalable large area BiVO4 photoanode on FTO with Ni current collectors. © HZB

The results allow to assess differences in the stability of BiVO<sub>4</sub> in various pH-buffered borate, phosphate and citrate electrolytes.

The results allow to assess differences in the stability of BiVO4 in various pH-buffered borate, phosphate and citrate electrolytes. © https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsaem.0c01904

As part of an international collaboration, a team at the HZB has examined the corrosion processes of high-quality BiVO4 photoelectrodes using different state-of-the-art characterisation methods. The result is the first operando stability study of high-purity BiVO4 photoanodes during the photoelectrochemical oxygen evolution reaction (OER). This work shows how the stability of photoelectrodes and catalysts can be compared and enhanced in the future.

Hydrogen is a versatile fuel that can store and release chemical energy when needed. Hydrogen can be produced in a climate-neutral way by the electrolytic splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen using solar energy. This can be achieved photo-electrochemically (PEC), and for this approach it is necessary to have low cost photoelectrodes that provide a certain photovoltage under illumination, and remain stable in aqueous electrolytes.

Stability of photoelectrodes

However, here lies the main obstacle; conventional semiconductors corrode very quickly in water. Metal-oxide thin films are much more stable, but still corrode over time. One of the most successful photoanode materials is bismuth vanadate (BiVO4), a complex metal oxide in which photocurrents are already close to the theoretical limit. But the biggest challenge for commercially viable PEC water splitting is now to assess and enhance the stability of photoelectrode materials during their PEC operation.

To this end, a team at the HZB Institute for Solar Fuels led by Prof. Roel van de Krol (HZB) together with groups from the Max Planck Institute for Iron Research, the Helmholtz Institute Erlangen-Nuremberg for Renewable Energy, the University of Freiburg and Imperial College London, have utilised a number of state-of-the-art characterisation methods to understand the corrosion processes of high-quality BiVO4 photo electrodes.

Observing the process from start to the end

"So far, we could only examine photoelectrodes before and after photoelectrochemical corrosion," says Dr. Ibbi Ahmet, who initiated the study together with Siyuan Zhang from the Max Planck Institute. "It was a bit like reading only the first and last chapters of a book, and not knowing how all the characters died". In a first step to solve this problem, the chemist provided a series of high-purity BiVO4 thin films that were studied in a newly designed flow cell with different electrolytes under standard illumination.

First operando stability study

The result is the first operando stability study of high-purity BiVO4 photoanodes during the photoelectrochemical oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Using in-situ plasma mass spectrometry (ICPMS), they were able to determine which elements were dissolved from the surface of the BiVO4 photoanodes during the photoelectrochemical reaction, in real time.

Stability number S

"From these measurements we were able to determine a useful parameter, the stability number (S)," says Ibbi. This stability number is calculated from the ratio between the O2 molecules produced and the number of dissolved metal atoms in the electrolyte and it is in fact a perfect comparable measure of photoelectrode stabilities. The stability of a photoelectrode is high if the splitting of water is proceeding rapidly (in this case the evolution of O2) and few metal atoms enter the electrolyte. This parameter can also be used to determine the change in photoelectrode stability during their lifetime or assess differences in the stability of BiVO4 in various pH-buffered borate, phosphate and citrate (hole scavenger) electrolytes.

This work shows how the stability of photoelectrodes and catalysts can be compared in the future. The authors have continued the collaboration and are now using these valuable techniques and insights to design viable solutions to enhance the stability of BiVO4 photoanodes and enable their use in long term practical applications.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • HZB-postdoc Feng Liang becomes associate Professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University
    News
    07.03.2025
    HZB-postdoc Feng Liang becomes associate Professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University
    Dr. Feng Liang has joined the HZB Institute Solar Fuels in 2021. Now, he has secured an associate professorship at the Green Hydrogen Innovation Center in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, China. He will start to build up his research team in June 2025.
  • Strategisches Positionspapier zur Stärkung der Solarindustrie
    Nachricht
    06.03.2025
    Strategisches Positionspapier zur Stärkung der Solarindustrie
    Frankfurt, 06. März 2025 – Die führenden deutschen Solarforschungseinrichtungen, die Fachabteilung „Photovoltaik Produktionsmittel“ des Industrieverbands VDMA und das Produktionsplanungs-Unternehmen RCT Solutions, haben ein gemeinsames Positionspapier zur Stärkung der deutschen und europäischen Solarindustrie veröffentlicht. Dieses wird nun an die Parteien übermittelt, die nach der Bundestagswahl im Bundestag vertreten sind. Ziel ist es, die vorgeschlagenen Maßnahmen in die Koalitionsverhandlungen einzubringen und damit die Grundlage für eine widerstandsfähige und wettbewerbsfähige Solarindustrie in Deutschland zu schaffen.
  • Mesoporous silicon: Semiconductor with new talents
    Science Highlight
    25.02.2025
    Mesoporous silicon: Semiconductor with new talents
    Silicon is the best-known semiconductor material. However, controlled nanostructuring drastically alters the material's properties. Using a specially developed etching apparatus, a team at HZB has now produced mesoporous silicon layers with countless tiny pores and investigated their electrical and thermal conductivity. For the first time, the researchers elucidated the electronic transport mechanism in this mesoporous silicon. The material has great potential for applications and could also be used to thermally insulate qubits for quantum computers.