Abstract

A conductive polymer (poly(p-phenylenevinylene), PPV) was covalently modified with RuII complexes to develop an all-polymer photocathode as a conceptual alternative to dye-sensitized NiO, which is the current state-of-the-art photocathode in solar fuels research. Photocathodes require efficient light-induced charge-transfer processes and we investigated these processes within our photocathodes using spectroscopic and spectro-electrochemical techniques. Ultrafast hole-injection dynamics in the polymer were investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy and charge transfer at the electrode–electrolyte interface was examined with chopped-light chronoamperometry. Light-induced hole injection from the photosensitizers into the PPV backbone was observed within 10 ps and the resulting charge-separated state (CSS) recombined within ~ 5 ns. This is comparable to CSS lifetimes of conventional NiO-photocathodes. Chopped-light chronoamperometry indicates enhanced charge-transfer at the electrode–electrolyte interface upon sensitization of the PPV with the RuII complexes and p-type behavior of the photocathode. The results presented here show that the polymer backbone behaves like classical molecularly sensitized NiO photocathodes and operates as a hole accepting semiconductor. This in turn demonstrates the feasibility of all-polymer photocathodes for application in solar energy conversion.

Highlights

  • A conductive polymer (poly(p-phenylenevinylene), PPV) was covalently modified with ­RuII complexes to develop an all-polymer photocathode as a conceptual alternative to dye-sensitized NiO, which is the current state-of-the-art photocathode in solar fuels research

  • We have developed a synthetic route towards two prototype systems, PPV-Ru1 and PPV-Ru2, where R­ uII-polypyridyl complexes were linked covalently to the PPV backbone by CLICK chemistry

  • We have demonstrated the photosensitization of PPV with different polypyridyl R­ uII complexes through CLICK chemistry

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Summary

Introduction

A conductive polymer (poly(p-phenylenevinylene), PPV) was covalently modified with ­RuII complexes to develop an all-polymer photocathode as a conceptual alternative to dye-sensitized NiO, which is the current state-of-the-art photocathode in solar fuels research. The light-induced charge transfer dynamics of PPV-Ru dissolved in ­CHCl3 were investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy upon excitation at 480 nm.

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