Water splitting combines sunlight and water
in a chemical reaction in order to harvest clean hydrogen energy. By
smoothing the surface of hematite, a team of researchers led by Boston
College chemist Dunwei Wang achieved 'unassisted' water splitting using
the abundant rust-like mineral and silicon to capture and store solar
energy within hydrogen gas.
Credit: Courtest of Nature Communications
Finding an efficient solar water splitting
method to mine electron-rich hydrogen for clean power has been thwarted
by the poor performance of hematite. But by 're-growing' the mineral's
surface, a smoother version of hematite doubled electrical yield,
opening a new door to energy-harvesting artificial photosynthesis,
according to a report published online today in the journal Nature Communications.
Re-grown hematite proved to be a better power generating anode,
producing a record low turn-on voltage that enabled the researchers to
be the first to use earth-abundant hematite and silicon as the sole
light absorbers in artificial photosynthesis, said Boston College
associate professor of chemistry Dunwei Wang, a lead author of the
report.
The new hydrogen harvesting process achieved an overall efficiency of
0.91 percent, a 'modest' mark in and of itself, but the first
'meaningful efficiency ever measured by hematite and amorphous silicon,
two of the most abundant elements on Earth,' the team reported.
'By simply smoothing the surface characteristics of hematite, this
close cousin of rust can be improved to couple with silicon, which is
derived from sand, to achieve complete water splitting for solar
hydrogen generation,' said Wang, whose research focuses on discovering
new methods to generate clean energy. 'This unassisted water splitting,
which is very rare, does not require expensive or scarce resources.'
Wang said the findings represent an important step toward realizing
the potential performance theoretical models have predicted for
hematite, an iron oxide similar to rust.
'This offers new hope that efficient and inexpensive solar fuel
production by readily available natural resources is within reach,' said
Wang. 'Getting there will contribute to a sustainable future powered by
renewable energy.'
The team, which included researchers from Boston College, UC Berkeley
and China's University of Science and Technology, decided to focus on
hematite's surface imperfections, which have been found in earlier
studies to limit 'turn-on' voltage required to jump-start
photoelectrochemistry, the central process behind using artificial
photosynthesis to capture and store solar energy in hydrogen gas.
The team re-evaluated hematite surface features using a synchrotron
particle accelerator at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. They
established a new 're-growth' strategy that applied an acidic solution
to the material under intense heat, a process that simultaneously
reduced ridges and filled depressions, smoothing the surface.
Tests immediately showed an improvement in turn-on voltage, as well
as an increase in photovoltage from 0.24 volts to 0.80 volts, a dramatic
increase in power generation.
The team reported that further modifications to the new
hematite-silicon method make it amenable to large-scale utilization.
Furthermore, the 're-growth' technique may be applicable to other
materials under study for additional breakthroughs in artificial
photosynthesis.
'It is a delight to see that a simple re-growth treatment can do so
much to improve the performance of hematite,' said Wang. 'Due to its
prior poor performance, hematite has been pronounced 'dead' by many
leading researchers in the field. We are happy to show that much can be
harvested from this earth abundant, non-toxic material.'
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