4.8 Article

Transient Surface Photovoltage Spectroscopy of (NH4)2Mo3S13/WSe2 Thin-Film Photocathodes for Photoelectrochemical Hydrogen Evolution

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages 22071-22081

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c01623

Keywords

WSe2; ATM; ATM/WSe2 heterojunction; thin films; photocurrent density; charge transfer; transient surface photovoltage

Funding

  1. Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation through the Georg Forster Research Fellowship (Germany)

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This study evaluates the potential of ammonium thiomolybdate thin film as a photocathode material for solar hydrogen production. Combing it with WSe2 thin film significantly increases the photocurrent density. Additionally, the study investigates the impact of WSe2 thin film quality on PEC hydrogen evolution.
Hydrogen produced from solar energy has the potential to replace petroleum in the future. To this respect, there is a need in the abandoned and efficient materials that can continuously split water molecules using solar energy. In this report, an ammonium thiomolybdate (ATM: (NH4)(2)Mo3S13) is evaluated as a p-type semiconductor film photocathode for hydrogen evolution reaction. The ATM thin films are prepared by spin-coating on fluorine-doped tin oxide substrates, and their structural, morphological, optical, photoelectrical, and photoelectrochemical (PEC) properties are studied. Transient surface photovoltage (TSPV) spectroscopy and spectroscopic ellipsometry indicate the band gap E-g = 1.9 eV for the ATM thin films. Furthermore, the photovoltage of the ATM thin films measured by TSPV is correlated to the photocurrents measured by the PEC characterization that can be used to evaluate the material potential for hydrogen generation. The films exhibit a low photocurrent density of 46 mu A cm(-2) at 0 V-RHE. However, its combination with WSe2 thin-film photocathodes results in a significant increase in photocurrent density up to 4.6 mA cm(-2) at 0 V-RHE (100 times). The reason for such a strong charge carrier transfer effect for ATM/WSe2 heterojunction photocathodes is studied by TSPV spectroscopy that allows a comprehensive evaluation of potential photovoltaic materials toward PEC hydrogen production. Furthermore, the photovoltage generated by a WSe2 thin film is 30 times lower than that of its single crystal, which indicates that the quality of WSe2 thin films should be improved for faster PEC hydrogen evolution.

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