Xunyu YangAbraham WolcottGongming WangAlissa SoboRobert C. FitzmorrisFang QianJin Z. ZhangYat Li
We report the rational synthesis of nitrogen-doped zinc oxide (ZnO:N) nanowire arrays, and their implementation as photoanodes in photoelectrochemical (PEC) cells for hydrogen generation from water splitting. Dense and vertically aligned ZnO nanowires were first prepared from a hydrothermal method, followed by annealing in ammonia to incorporate N as a dopant. Nanowires with a controlled N concentration (atomic ratio of N to Zn) up to approximately 4% were prepared by varying the annealing time. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies confirm N substitution at O sites in ZnO nanowires up to approximately 4%. Incident-photon-to-current-efficiency measurements carried out on PEC cell with ZnO:N nanowire arrays as photoanodes demonstrate a significant increase of photoresponse in the visible region compared to undoped ZnO nanowires prepared at similar conditions. Mott-Schottky measurements on a representative 3.7% ZnO:N sample give a flat-band potential of -0.58 V, a carrier density of approximately 4.6 x 10(18) cm(-3), and a space-charge layer of approximately 22 nm. Upon illumination at a power density of 100 mW/cm(2) (AM 1.5), water splitting is observed in both ZnO and ZnO:N nanowires. In comparison to ZnO nanowires without N-doping, ZnO:N nanowires show an order of magnitude increase in photocurrent density with photo-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency of 0.15% at an applied potential of +0.5 V (versus Ag/AgCl). These results suggest substantial potential of metal oxide nanowire arrays with controlled doping in PEC water splitting applications.
Xunyu Yang (2183562)Abraham Wolcott (1276602)Gongming Wang (1303608)Alissa Sobo (2369860)Robert Carl Fitzmorris (2300320)Fang Qian (1427635)Jin Z. Zhang (1268352)Yat Li (1303611)
Minmin ShiXiaowei PanWeiming QiuDingxiang ZhengMingsheng XuHongzheng Chen