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Update(MM/DD/YYYY):12/26/2022

Clarifying Conditions for Enhancing the Conversion Efficiency of Powdered Photocatalysts that Generate Hydrogen from Water Under Visible Light

– Prediction of particle-size reduction and doping effects to conversion efficiency by quantitative measurement and theoretical analysis –

 
Researchers) SEKI Kazuhiko, Chief Senior Researcher, NANDAL Vikas, AIST Postdoctoral Researcher, Artificial Photosynthesis Research Team, Global Zero Emission Research Center, MATSUZAKI Hiroyuki, Group Leader, SHOJI Ryota, AIST Postdoctoral Researcher, Nanomaterial Structure Analysis Research Group, Research Institute for Material and Chemical Measurement

Points

  • Research team successfully obtained physical properties such as photo-excited carrier lifetime in powdered oxysulfide photocatalysts
  • Simulations using the physical properties of oxysulfide photocatalysts provided conditions for achieving a conversion efficiency of 10 %
  • Expected to contribute to significant performance enhancement of powdered photocatalysts

Figure of new research results

(Left) Time evolution of the photo-excited carrier concentration of the oxysulfide photocatalyst Y2Ti2O5S2 with respect to that at 1 picosecond after light irradiation. The photograph shows the powdered Y2Ti2O5S2 used for this measurement. (Right) Performance prediction with the size of a photocatalyst particle.


Background

In 2019, Shinshu University Special Contract Professor DOMEN Kazunari et al. developed the powdered oxysulfide photocatalyst Y2Ti2O5S2 that absorbs sunlight of wavelengths below 650 nm and splits water into hydrogen and oxygen. This photocatalyst continuously splits water into hydrogen and oxygen at a volume ratio of 2:1 over a period of 20 hours, and theoretically can be expected to achieve a conversion efficiency of more than 10 %. However, the current conversion efficiency is less than 1 % and further improvement of photocatalyst is needed, but the guidelines were not clear.

 

Summary

In collaboration with research partners*, AIST researchers clarified the conditions needed for an oxysulfide photocatalyst Y2Ti2O5S2, which splits water into hydrogen and oxygen under visible light, to achieve a conversion efficiency from solar energy to reaction energy (hereafter, “conversion efficiency”) over 10 % for practical use.

In this research, by using transient absorption spectroscopy, the photo-excited carrier concentration of Y2Ti2O5S2 was recorded with time over the range of six orders of magnitude from 1 picosecond to 1 microsecond, and physical properties such as the lifetime of photo-excited carrier (hereafter, “carrier lifetime”) in powder form were obtained by analyzing the recorded data. Then, simulations were performed using the physical properties to obtain the relationship between the conversion efficiency and the powder particle size. It was found that the conversion efficiency could exceed 10 % by reducing the particle size below 1 micrometer. Furthermore, simulation analysis assuming the doping effect to extend the carrier lifetime suggested the conversion efficiency larger than 10 % by reducing the electron concentration to 1/100th of the current level.

The results of this research provide a quantitative guideline for further enhancing the conversion efficiency of the oxysulfide photocatalysts and development of new materials that more efficiently generate hydrogen from water.

*The Research Association of Artificial Photosynthetic Chemical Process (ARPChem) commissioned by NEDO, Tokushima University, Kyoto University, and Shinshu University.





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