Selective photoelectrochemical (PEC) water oxidation to hydrogen peroxide is an underexplored option as opposed to the mainstream oxygen reduction reaction. Albeit interesting, selective H2 O2 production via oxidative pathway is… Click to show full abstract
Selective photoelectrochemical (PEC) water oxidation to hydrogen peroxide is an underexplored option as opposed to the mainstream oxygen reduction reaction. Albeit interesting, selective H2 O2 production via oxidative pathway is plagued by the noncontrollable two-electron transfer reaction and the overoxidation of the thus-formed H2 O2 to O2 . Here, ZnO passivator-coated BiVO4 photoanode is reported for selective PEC H2 O2 production. Both the H2 O2 selectivity and production rate increase in the range of 1.0-2.0 V versus RHE under simulated sunlight irradiation. The photoelectrochemical impedance spectra and open-circuit potentials suggest a flattened band bending and positively shifted quasi-Fermi level of BiVO4 upon ZnO coating, facilitating H2 O2 generation and suppressing the competitive reaction of O2 evolution. The ZnO overlayer also inhibits H2 O2 decomposition, accelerates charge extraction from BiVO4 , and serves as a hole reservoir under photoexcitation. This work offers insights into surface states and the role of the coating layer in manipulating two/four-electron transfer for selective H2 O2 synthesis from PEC water oxidation.
               
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