Solar Water Splitting with a Hydrogenase Integrated in Photoelectrochemical Tandem Cells

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Abstract

Hydrogenases (H2ases) are benchmark electrocatalysts for H2 production, both in biology and (photo)catalysis in vitro. We report the tailoring of a p-type Si photocathode for optimal loading and wiring of H2ase through the introduction of a hierarchical inverse opal (IO) TiO2 interlayer. This proton-reducing Si|IO-TiO2|H2ase photocathode is capable of driving overall water splitting in combination with a photoanode. We demonstrate unassisted (bias-free) water splitting by wiring Si|IO-TiO2|H2ase to a modified BiVO4 photoanode in a photoelectrochemical (PEC) cell during several hours of irradiation. Connecting the Si|IO-TiO2|H2ase to a photosystem II (PSII) photoanode provides proof of concept for an engineered Z-scheme that replaces the non-complementary, natural light absorber photosystem I with a complementary abiotic silicon photocathode.

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Nam, D. H., Zhang, J. Z., Andrei, V., Kornienko, N., Heidary, N., Wagner, A., … Reisner, E. (2018). Solar Water Splitting with a Hydrogenase Integrated in Photoelectrochemical Tandem Cells. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 57(33), 10595–10599. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201805027

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