Abstract

Zinc oxide nanowire photoanodes are chemically stabilized by conformal growth of an ultrathin shell of titania through atomic layer deposition, permitting their stable operation for water splitting in a strongly alkaline solution. Because of the passivation of zinc oxide surface charge traps by titania coating, core/shell nanowire arrays supply a photocurrent density of 0.5 mA/cm2 under simulated AM1.5G sunlight at the thermodynamic oxygen evolving potential, demonstrating 25% higher photoelectrochemical water splitting activity compared to as-grown zinc oxide wires. By thermally annealing the zinc oxide wire arrays prior to surface passivation, we further increase the photocurrent density to 0.7 mA/cm2—the highest reported value for doped or undoped zinc oxide photoanodes studied under similar simulated sunlight. Photoexcitations at energies above the zinc oxide band gap are converted with efficiency greater than 80%. Photoluminescence measurements of the best-performing nanowire arrays are consistent wi...

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