Abstract

Research on light-driven catalysis has gained tremendous importance due to the ever-increasing power consumption and the threatening situation of global warming related to burning fossil fuels. Significant efforts have been dedicated to artificial photosynthesis mimicking nature to split H2O into H2 and O2 by solar energy. Novel semiconductor und molecular photocatalysts focusing on one-step excitation processes via single component photocatalysts or via two-step excitation processes mimicking the Z-scheme of natural photosynthesis are currently developed. Analytical and physicochemical methods, which provide information at different time and length scales, are used to gain fundamental understanding of all processes leading to catalytic activity, i.e., light absorption, charge separation, transfer of charges to the reaction centres and catalytic turnover, but also understanding degradation processes of the photocatalytic active material. Especially, molecular photocatalysts still suffer from limited long-term stability due to the formation of reactive intermediates, which may lead to degradation. Although there is an overwhelming number of research articles and reviews focussing on various materials for photocatalytic water splitting, to date only few reviews have been published providing a comprehensive overview on methods for characterizing such materials. This review will highlight spectroscopic, spectroelectrochemical, and electrochemical approaches in respect to their potential in studying processes in semiconductor and (supra)molecular photocatalysts. Special emphasis will be on spectroscopic methods to investigate light-induced processes in intermediates of sequential electron transfer chains. Further, microscopic characterization methods, which are predominantly used for semiconducting and hybrid photocatalytic materials will be reviewed as surface area, structure, facets, defects, and bulk properties such as crystallinity and crystal size are key parameters for charge separation, transfer processes and suppression of charge recombination. Recent developments in scanning probe microscopy will also be highlighted as such techniques are highly suited for studying photocatalytic active material.

Highlights

  • Over the last decades, tremendous efforts have been made in homogeneous and heterogenous solar radiation-driven photocatalysis pushed by the need for high-efficiency and technologically useful solar energy conversion systems

  • Novel semiconductor und molecular photocatalysts focusing on one-step excitation processes via single component photocatalysts or via two-step excitation processes mimicking the Z-scheme of natural photosynthesis are currently developed

  • The results show that in the case of electron withdrawing substitution, the ligand is capable of accepting several electrons, i.e., successive reduction of the system is localized on the 4H-imidazole ligand and in the single reduced species, MLCT transition in the visible range transfers electron density towards the 4H-imidazole ligand

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Summary

Introduction

Tremendous efforts have been made in homogeneous and heterogenous solar radiation-driven photocatalysis pushed by the need for high-efficiency and technologically useful solar energy conversion systems. The activity in the field of semiconductor based artificial photosynthesis is evident by the large number of publications and excellent reviews, which were published in recent years.[3,7,8,9,15,22,23,26,27,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40] Devices following the Z-scheme tandem approach that operate spontaneously only by absorbing solar radiation e.g., in the visible range without applying additional bias have been reported reaching solar to hydrogen efficiencies up to 19%.41,42 Despite these promising results, one main challenge remains to find materials with sufficient longterm stability. Special emphasis in this review will be on in situ respectively operando spectroscopic, spectroelectrochemical, electro-chemical, in situ scanning probe microscopic methods and ex situ electron microscopy to give an overview for this multidisciplinary research field that includes scientists and students from the STEM disciplines

Characterization methods
Spectroscopic techniques
Microscopic techniques
Scanning electrochemical probe microscopy
Bulk electrochemical methods
Findings
Conclusions
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