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R.D. Nasby

Bio: R.D. Nasby is an academic researcher from Sandia National Laboratories. The author has contributed to research in topics: Band gap & Differential capacitance. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 395 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, N-type tungsten trioxide is shown to be a stable semiconducting anode for the photoelectrolysis of water and a band gap of 2.7 eV provides a factor of three increase in the utilizable solar spectrum as compared to TiO 2.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, photoinduced currents at single crystal α-Fe2O3 anodes have been observed for incident radiation of greater than the band gap energy (Eg = 2.2 eV).

172 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, photoinduced currents at BaTiO3 semiconductor electrodes for incident radiation greater than the band gap energy (Eg = 3.3 eV) were obtained with an applied potential.

62 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The latest efforts using advanced characterization techniques, particularly electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, are presented to define the obstacles that remain to be surmounted in order to fully exploit the potential of hematite for solar energy conversion.
Abstract: Photoelectrochemical (PEC) cells offer the ability to convert electromagnetic energy from our largest renewable source, the Sun, to stored chemical energy through the splitting of water into molecular oxygen and hydrogen. Hematite (α-Fe(2)O(3)) has emerged as a promising photo-electrode material due to its significant light absorption, chemical stability in aqueous environments, and ample abundance. However, its performance as a water-oxidizing photoanode has been crucially limited by poor optoelectronic properties that lead to both low light harvesting efficiencies and a large requisite overpotential for photoassisted water oxidation. Recently, the application of nanostructuring techniques and advanced interfacial engineering has afforded landmark improvements in the performance of hematite photoanodes. In this review, new insights into the basic material properties, the attractive aspects, and the challenges in using hematite for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting are first examined. Next, recent progress enhancing the photocurrent by precise morphology control and reducing the overpotential with surface treatments are critically detailed and compared. The latest efforts using advanced characterization techniques, particularly electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, are finally presented. These methods help to define the obstacles that remain to be surmounted in order to fully exploit the potential of this promising material for solar energy conversion.

2,318 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the behavior of semiconducting electrodes for photoelectrolysis of water is examined in terms of the physical properties of the semiconductor and the photocurrent is described using a simple Schottky barrier.
Abstract: The behavior of semiconducting electrodes for photoelectrolysis of water is examined in terms of the physical properties of the semiconductor. The semiconductor‐electrolyte junction is treated as a simple Schottky barrier, and the photocurrent is described using this model. The approach is appropriate since large‐band‐gap semiconductors have an intrinsic oxygen overpotential which removes the electrode reaction kinetics as the rate‐limiting step. The model is successful in describing the wavelength and potential dependence of the photocurrent in WO3 and allows a determination of the band gap, optical absorption depth, minority‐carrier diffusion length, flat‐band potential, and the nature of the fundamental optical transition (direct or indirect). It is shown for WO3 that minority‐carrier diffusion plays a limited role in determining the photoresponse of the semiconductor‐electrolyte junction. There are indications that the diffusion length in this low carrier mobility material is determined by diffusion‐controlled bulk recombination processes rather than the more common trap‐limited recombination. It is also shown that the fundamental optical transition is indirect and that the band‐gap energy depends relatively strongly on applied potential and electrolyte. This effect seems to be the result of field‐induced crystallographic distortions in antiferroelectric WO3.

1,758 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on the materials-related issues in the development of high-efficiency photo-electrochemical cells (PECs), in terms of semiconducting and electrochemical properties and their impact on the performance of PECs.

1,424 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fate of photogenerated holes in photoelectrodes for water splitting was examined using H2O2 as an efficient hole scavenger, and all holes that arrived at the electrode/electrolyte interface were collected.
Abstract: We study hematite (α-Fe2O3) photoelectrodes for water splitting by examining the fate of photogenerated holes. Using H2O2 as an efficient hole scavenger, we collect all holes that arrive at the electrode/electrolyte interface. This provides the ability to distinguish between and quantify bulk and surface recombination processes involved in the photoelectrochemical oxidation of water. Below 1.0 VRHE, electrolyte oxidation kinetics limits the performance but above 1.2 VRHE bulk recombination becomes the limiting factor.

902 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Raman and Mossbauer showed that photoanodes consisting of nanostructured hematite prepared by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition (APCVD) have previously set a benchmark for solar water splitting.
Abstract: Photoanodes consisting of nanostructured hematite prepared by atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition (APCVD) have previously set a benchmark for solar water splitting. Here, we fully investigate this promising system by varying critical synthetic parameters and probing the photoanode performance to determine the major factors that influence operation. By varying the film thickness, we show film growth to be linear with an incubation time. We find no concern with electron transport for films up to 600 nm, but a higher recombination rate of photogenerated carriers in the hematite near the interface with the fluorine-doped tin oxide, as compared to the bulk section of the film. The mechanism for the formation of the thin film’s nanoporous dendritic structure is discussed on the basis of the results from varying the substrate growth temperate. The observed feature sizes of the film are found to depend strongly on this temperature and the presence of silicon dopant precursor (TEOS). Raman and Mossbauer...

604 citations