Defect Engineering of Ta3N5 Photoanodes: Enhancing Charge Transport and Photoconversion Efficiencies via Ti Doping

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Abstract

While Ta3N5 shows excellent potential as a semiconductor photoanode for solar water splitting, its performance is hindered by poor charge carrier transport and trapping due to native defects that introduce electronic states deep within its bandgap. Here, it is demonstrated that controlled Ti doping of Ta3N5 can dramatically reduce the concentration of deep-level defects and enhance its photoelectrochemical performance, yielding a sevenfold increase in photocurrent density and a 300 mV cathodic shift in photocurrent onset potential compared to undoped material. Comprehensive characterization reveals that Ti4+ ions substitute Ta5+ lattice sites, thereby introducing compensating acceptor states, reducing the concentrations of deleterious nitrogen vacancies and reducing Ta3+ states, and thereby suppressing trapping and recombination. Owing to the similar ionic radii of Ti4+ and Ta5+, substitutional doping does not introduce lattice strain or significantly affect the underlying electronic structure of the host semiconductor. Furthermore, Ti can be incorporated without increasing the oxygen donor content, thereby enabling the electrical conductivity to be tuned by over seven orders of magnitude. Thus, Ti doping of Ta3N5 provides a powerful basis for precisely engineering its optoelectronic characteristics and to substantially improve its functional characteristics as an advanced photoelectrode for solar fuels applications.

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Wagner, L. I., Sirotti, E., Brune, O., Grötzner, G., Eichhorn, J., Santra, S., … Sharp, I. D. (2024). Defect Engineering of Ta3N5 Photoanodes: Enhancing Charge Transport and Photoconversion Efficiencies via Ti Doping. Advanced Functional Materials, 34(4). https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202306539

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