Photosystem I-based biophotovoltaics on nanostructured hematite

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Abstract

The electronic coupling between a robust red algal photosystem I (PSI) associated with its light harvesting antenna (LHCI) and nanocrystalline n-type semiconductors, TiO 2 and hematite (α-Fe2O3) is utilized for fabrication of the biohybrid dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSC). PSI-LHCI is immobilized as a structured multilayer over both semiconductors organized as highly ordered nanocrystalline arrays, as evidenced by FE-SEM and XRD spectroscopy. Of all the biohybrid DSSCs examined, α-Fe2O3 /PSI-LHCI biophotoanode operates at a highest quantum efficiency and generates the largest open circuit photocurrent compared to the tandem system based on TiO2 /PSI-LHCI material. This is accomplished by immobilization of the PSI-LHCI complex with its reducing side towards the hematite surface and nanostructuring of the PSILHCI multilayer in which the subsequent layers of this complex are organized in the head-to-tail orientation. The biohybrid PSI-LHCI-DSSC is capable of sustained photoelectrochemical H 2 production upon illumination with visible light above 590 nm. Although the solar conversion efficiency of the PSI-LHCI/ hematite DSSC is currently below a practical use, the system provides a blueprint for a genuinely green solar cell that can be used for molecular hydrogen production at a rate of 744 μmoles H 2 mg Chl-1h-1 , placing it amongst the best performing biohybrid solar-to-fuel nanodevices.

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Ocakoglu, K., Krupnik, T., Van Den Bosch, B., Harputlu, E., Gullo, M. P., Olmos, J. D. J., … Kargul, J. (2014). Photosystem I-based biophotovoltaics on nanostructured hematite. Advanced Functional Materials, 24(47), 7467–7477. https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201401399

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