posted on 2024-09-19, 14:37authored byErling Zhao, Jieqiong Shan, Pengfei Yin, Weiliang Wang, Kun Du, Chueh-Cheng Yang, Jiaxin Guo, Jing Mao, Zhen Peng, Chia-Hsin Wang, Tao Ling
Metal chalcogenides are promising visible-light absorption
materials;
however, their application in overall water-splitting has long been
hampered by the sluggish kinetics of oxygen evolution reaction (OER)
and serious photocorrosion. Fundamentally, these critical issues are
related to the behavior of photogenerated holes. Here, using ZnSe
as a model catalyst, we achieve high-performance overall water-splitting
in intrinsic activity and stability by facilitating the utilization
of holes in the OER rather than self-corrosion. This is guided by
our microkinetic analysis that the kinetic bottleneck of hole-mediated
OER on ZnSe is the high reaction barrier and low concentration of
holes reaching the photocatalyst surface. Accordingly, we radically
modify the conduction characteristic of ZnSe surface layer into p-type to break the above OER bottleneck. The resulting
ZnSe photocatalyst exhibits an impressive overall water-splitting
performance in pure water with an ideal H2/O2 molar ratio of ∼2 and a solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency
of 0.1891% without the assistance of any cocatalyst, outperforming
ever-reported overall water-splitting of state-of-the-art metal chalcogenides
under identical conditions. In addition, due to the greatly promoted
OER, the critical photocorrosion issue is successfully suppressed
on the engineered ZnSe photocatalyst. This work breaks the long-standing
limitations of metal chalcogenides for overall water-splitting.