Recent experiments demonstrated that interfacial water dissociation (H2O ⇆ H+ + OH–) could be accelerated exponentially by an electric field applied to graphene electrodes, a phenomenon related to the Wien… Click to show full abstract
Recent experiments demonstrated that interfacial water dissociation (H2O ⇆ H+ + OH–) could be accelerated exponentially by an electric field applied to graphene electrodes, a phenomenon related to the Wien effect. Here we report an order-of-magnitude acceleration of the interfacial water dissociation reaction under visible-light illumination. This process is accompanied by spatial separation of protons and hydroxide ions across one-atom-thick graphene and enhanced by strong interfacial electric fields. The found photoeffect is attributed to the combination of graphene’s perfect selectivity with respect to protons, which prevents proton–hydroxide recombination, and to proton transport acceleration by the Wien effect, which occurs in synchrony with the water dissociation reaction. Our findings provide fundamental insights into ion dynamics near atomically thin proton-selective interfaces and suggest that strong interfacial fields can enhance and tune very fast ionic processes, which is of relevance for applications in photocatalysis and designing reconfigurable materials.
               
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