Abstract

This article reports a solution-processed synthesis of copper oxide (CuxO) to be used as a potential photocathode for solar hydrogen production in the solar water-splitting system. CuxO thin films were synthesized through the reduction of copper iodide (CuI) thin films by sodium hydroxide (NaOH), which were deposited by the spin coating method from CuI solution in a polar aprotic solvent (acetonitrile). The phase and crystalline quality of the synthesized CuxO thin films prepared at various annealing temperatures were investigated using various techniques. The X-ray diffraction and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy studies confirm the presence of Cu2O, CuO/Cu2O mixed phase, and pure CuO phase at annealing temperatures of 250, 300, and 350 °C, respectively. It is revealed from the experimental findings that the synthesized CuxO thin films with an annealing temperature of 350 °C possess the highest crystallinity, smooth surface morphology, and higher carrier density. The highest photocurrent density of −19.12 mA/cm2 at −1 V versus RHE was achieved in the photoelectrochemical solar hydrogen production system with the use of the CuxO photocathode annealed at a temperature of 350 °C. Therefore, it can be concluded that CuxO synthesized by the spin coating method through the acetonitrile solvent route can be used as an efficient photocathode in the solar water-splitting system.

Highlights

  • Energy consumption is increasing rapidly because of the increase in population and industrialization in the world

  • We demonstrate the facile one-step synthesis of CuxO thin films through the reduction of CuI thin films prepared from a CuI solution dissolved in acetonitrile by the spin coating method for the efficient application in the solar water-splitting system

  • The phase and crystallinity of the synthesized CuxO thin films were determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Energy consumption is increasing rapidly because of the increase in population and industrialization in the world. Finding suitable materials for the absorption of a full portion of incident photons, developing active catalysts, and realizing the appropriate interface design between the catalyst, photoabsorber, and electrolyte to minimize losses are the main challenges for an efficient PEC system.[5]

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