Abstract
Solar-driven water splitting provides a leading approach to store the abundant yet intermittent solar energy and produce hydrogen as a clean and sustainable energy carrier. A straightforward route to light-driven water splitting is to apply self-supported particulate photocatalysts, which is expected to allow solar hydrogen to be competitive with fossil-fuel-derived hydrogen on a levelized cost basis. More importantly, the powder-based systems can lend themselves to making functional panels on a large scale while retaining the intrinsic activity of the photocatalyst. However, all attempts to generate hydrogen via powder-based solar water-splitting systems to date have unfortunately fallen short of the efficiency values required for practical applications. Photocatalysis on photocatalyst particles involves three sequential steps: (i) absorption of photons with higher energies than the bandgap of the photocatalysts, leading to the excitation of electron-hole pairs in the particles, (ii) charge separation and migration of these photoexcited carriers, and (iii) surface chemical reactions based on these carriers. In this review, we focus on the challenges of each step and summarize material design strategies to overcome the obstacles and limitations. This review illustrates that it is possible to employ the fundamental principles underlying photosynthesis and the tools of chemical and materials science to design and prepare photocatalysts for overall water splitting.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
New Non-Oxide Photocatalysts Designed for Overall Water Splitting under Visible Light
Overall water splitting to form hydrogen and oxygen over a heterogeneous photocatalyst using solar energy is a promising process for clean and recyclable hydrogen production in ...
Heterogeneous photocatalyst materials for water splitting
This critical review shows the basis of photocatalytic water splitting and experimental points, and surveys heterogeneous photocatalyst materials for water splitting into H2 and...
Photocatalysis and solar hydrogen production
Abstract Photocatalytic water splitting is a challenging reaction because it is an ultimate solution to energy and environmental issues. Recently, many new powdered photocatalys...
Development of Photocatalyst Materials for Water Splitting with the Aim at Photon Energy Conversion.
A photocatalyst which has extensively been studied so far is TiO2 with a 3.0-3.2eV band gap. Well-known photocatalysts with visible-light response are only Pt/CdS and WO3. Thus,...
Hydrogen evolution from water splitting on nanocomposite photocatalysts
The photocatalytic production of H2 in one step is potentially one of the most promising ways for the conversion and storage of solar energy. The paper overviews our recent stud...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2019
- Type
- review
- Volume
- 120
- Issue
- 2
- Pages
- 919-985
- Citations
- 2465
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1021/acs.chemrev.9b00201