Unassisted photoelectrochemical water splitting exceeding 7% solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency using photon recycling

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Abstract

Various tandem cell configurations have been reported for highly efficient and spontaneous hydrogen production from photoelectrochemical solar water splitting. However, there is a contradiction between two main requirements of a front photoelectrode in a tandem cell configuration, namely, high transparency and high photocurrent density. Here we demonstrate a simple yet highly effective method to overcome this contradiction by incorporating a hybrid conductive distributed Bragg reflector on the back side of the transparent conducting substrate for the front photoelectrochemical electrode, which functions as both an optical filter and a conductive counter-electrode of the rear dye-sensitized solar cell. The hybrid conductive distributed Bragg reflectors were designed to be transparent to the long-wavelength part of the incident solar spectrum (>500 nm) for the rear solar cell, while reflecting the short-wavelength photons ( <500 nm) which can then be absorbed by the front photoelectrochemical electrode for enhanced photocurrent generation.

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Shi, X., Jeong, H., Oh, S. J., Ma, M., Zhang, K., Kwon, J., … Park, J. H. (2016). Unassisted photoelectrochemical water splitting exceeding 7% solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency using photon recycling. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11943

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