Abstract

Hydrogen production from solar water splitting, especially via photovoltaic-electrocatalysis, has been regarded as a promising approach for the conversion of abundant but intermittent solar energy into storable chemical fuels. Despite much progress, conventional combined photoelectrochemical devices usually suffer from severe instability issues, which largely inhibit them for practical applications and may also lead to the uncertain efficiency value for true overall water splitting. Here, we report an unassisted solar water splitting device with concurrent high efficiency and stability, which is constructed by spatial coupling of tandem III-V-based GaInP/GaAs/Ge light absorber and robust earth-abundant Ni foil-based MoNi4/MoO2 bifunctional electrocatalysts. Remarkably, apart from the outstanding hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) performance, bifunctional MoNi4/MoO2 electrocatalysts also largely avoid electrode contamination issues, while the robust Ni substrate protects III-Vs from conventional corrosion problems. Consequently, this integrated photovoltaic-electrolysis system device exhibits a high solar-to-hydrogen (STH) conversion efficiency of 17.6 % in alkaline electrolytes with long-term stability of up to 845 h. Further construction into a wireless unassisted monolithic device could lead to an artificial leaf with an STH efficiency of 4.28 %, holding great promise in future solar fuel production with concurrent high efficiency, good stability as well as low cost.

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