ACS applied materials & interfaces, volume 12, issue 46, pages 51530-51536
Photocorrosion of ZnO Single Crystals during Electrochemical Water Splitting
Dominik Dworschak
1
,
Carina Brunnhofer
1
,
Markus Valtiner
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-11-09
Journal:
ACS applied materials & interfaces
scimago Q1
SJR: 2.058
CiteScore: 16.0
Impact factor: 8.3
ISSN: 19448244, 19448252
PubMed ID:
33166115
General Materials Science
Abstract
Degradation and dissolution of transparent semiconducting oxides is central to various areas, including design of catalysts and catalysis conditions, as well as passivation of metal surfaces. In particular, photocorrosion can be significant and plays a central role during photoelectrochemical activity of transparent semiconducting oxides. Here, we utilize an electrochemical flow cell combined with an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) to enable the in situ study of the time-resolved release of zinc into solution under simultaneous radiation of UV-light. With this system we study the dissolution of zinc oxide single crystals with (0001) and (101̅0) orientations. At acidic and alkaline pH, we characterized potential dependent dissolution rates into both the oxygen and the hydrogen evolving conditions. A significant influence of the UV radiation and the pH of the electrolyte was observed. The observed dissolution behavior agrees well with the surface chemistry and stabilization mechanism of ZnO surfaces. In particular, polar ZnO(0001) shows ideal stability at low potentials and under hydrogen evolution conditions. Whereas ZnO(101̅0) sustains higher dissolution rates, while it is inactive for water splitting. Our data demonstrates that surface design and fundamental understanding of surface chemistry provides an effective path to rendering electroactive surfaces stable under operating conditions.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.