2 research outputs found
Mo-doped TiO2 photoanodes using [Ti4Mo2O8(OEt)10]2 bimetallic oxo cages as a single source precursor
Photoelectrochemical solar water splitting is a promising and sustainable technology for producing solar
fuels such as clean hydrogen from water. A widely studied photoanode semiconductor for this
application is TiO2, but it suffers from a large band gap (3.2 eV) and fast recombination of electrons and
holes. Herein, we present a novel, facile and rapid strategy to develop Mo-doped TiO2 (Mo:TiO2) mixed
anatase–rutile photoanodes using [Ti4Mo2O8(OEt)10]2 bimetallic oxo cages as a single source precursor.
These cages dissolved in tetrahydrofuran deposit by spray pyrolysis at 150 C forming films with
hierarchical porosity on the micrometer and nanometer scale. XPS, EDXS and UV-Vis spectroscopy
reveal Mo atoms evaporate during annealing in air at temperatures 650–800 C, contributing to the
formation of nanostructures and porosity. XPS depth profiling, XRD, EDXS, Raman, and electron
paramagnetic resonance indicate that the remaining Mo atoms are well spread and incorporated in the
TiO2 lattice, at interstitial or substitutional sites of the rutile or anatase phases depending on the
annealing temperature. Photocurrent measurements show that Mo:TiO2 photoanodes optimized at
700 C outperform a TiO2 photoanode prepared in a similar manner by a factor of two at 1.23 VRHE.
Finally, UV-Vis spectroscopy, conduction and valence band calculations, and incident-to-photon
efficiency measurements show these Mo:TiO2 photoanodes possess a narrower band gap than TiO2 and
higher efficiency in the visible light range (5% at 400 nm). These outcomes open a new avenue in the
exploitation of titanium oxo cages and advance the development of photoelectrodes for water splitting
and energy application
