Photoelectrochemical water splitting by hematite boosted in a heterojunction with B-doped g-C3N4 nanosheets and carbon nanotubes†
Abstract
Here, we effectively layered economically viable pyrolytic carbon nanotubes (p-CNTs) as solid-state mediators to accelerate the charge carrier transfer between hematite (α-Fe2O3) and boron-doped graphitic carbon nitride (B-C3N4). This synergistic combination leads to higher photoelectrochemical water splitting performance with a photoanodic current density of 2.85 mA cm−2, which is a 4.1-fold enhancement compared to pristine α-Fe2O3 and the O2 evolution rate detected was 22.70 μmol h−1 cm−2 with a Faraday efficiency of ∼98% at 1.7 VRHE. Mott–Schottky analysis confirms the highest donor density of 55.7 × 1019 cm−3 for the α-Fe2O3/B-C3N4/p-CNT photoanode, compared to α-Fe2O3 and α-Fe2O3/B-C3N4. Superstructuring the B-C3N4 and p-CNT onto pristine α-Fe2O3 enhances the charge separation and transfer efficiencies, and moreover mitigates recombination losses. DFT calculations suggest the type II charge transfer mechanism switched to an enhanced Z-scheme type by simple deposition of p-CNT on the α-Fe2O3/B-C3N4 heterojunction. Achieving such cost-effective, highly efficient hematite-based photoanodes offers an opportunity to fabricate tandem photoelectrochemical devices for low-cost solar fuel production.