Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting

Solar water splitting, converting solar energy into chemical fuel by using semiconductors as the mediator, is one of the most promising approaches for sustainable development. However, its commercial applications are still limited, largely due to its high cost and low photocatalytic efficiency. Hen...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yanyan
Other Authors: School of Materials Science & Engineering
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51112
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-511122023-03-04T16:34:03Z Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting Zhang, Yanyan School of Materials Science & Engineering Chen Xiaodong DRNTU::Engineering::Materials::Energy materials Solar water splitting, converting solar energy into chemical fuel by using semiconductors as the mediator, is one of the most promising approaches for sustainable development. However, its commercial applications are still limited, largely due to its high cost and low photocatalytic efficiency. Hence, this dissertation aims at the challenges in terms of cost-effective and photocatalytic performance. For one thing, a novel and cheap photocatalyst was rationally designed and synthesized through electronic structure engineering. On the other hand, the structure of metal oxide nanoparticles was rationally designed to enhance the charge separation and to achieve overall water splitting. Firstly, a novel photocatalyst (C-doped Al2O3) converted from the well-known insulator, Al2O3, was successfully developed. It was for the first time used in the solar water splitting system and showed good photocatalytic performance. In order to reveal the intrinsic mechanism of this new earth-abundant photocatalyst, many advanced techniques were conducted such as TEM, AES, STXM, XPS and UPS. Finally, we figured out that the bandgap narrowing is resulting from the mid-gap state formed by the C 2p orbital in the forbidden band. The photocatalytic H2 generation performance indicated the successful transition from insulator to semiconductor. However, the efficiency of the C-doped Al2O3 is expected to be further increased with visible-light irradiation. As we know the solar energy is mostly composed of visible light, therefore, it is very essential to design visible-light active photocatalytic systems. CdS nanomaterials, with a small bandgap (ca. 2.4 eV), is a very well-known and promising photocatalytic materials for visible-light water splitting. However, CdS nanoparticles notoriously tend to aggregate, leading to the increment of the charge recombination rate. Herein, 3D echinus-like titanate nanomaterials with the anti-aggregation structure was designed and successfully synthesized, in which CdS nanoparticles are spatially distributed. And we found that the 3D CdS-titanate composite showed excellent photocatalytic performance than that of the pure CdS under visible light. This is owing to the quick electron injection from the CdS to titanate (~ 0.33 ns), supported by the transient absorption (TA) measurement, which greatly enhance the separation of the photoinduced electron/hole pairs on CdS. Doctor of Philosophy (MSE) 2013-01-22T06:34:19Z 2013-01-22T06:34:19Z 2013 2013 Thesis Zhang, Y. (2013). Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51112 en 146 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
Zhang, Yanyan
Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
description Solar water splitting, converting solar energy into chemical fuel by using semiconductors as the mediator, is one of the most promising approaches for sustainable development. However, its commercial applications are still limited, largely due to its high cost and low photocatalytic efficiency. Hence, this dissertation aims at the challenges in terms of cost-effective and photocatalytic performance. For one thing, a novel and cheap photocatalyst was rationally designed and synthesized through electronic structure engineering. On the other hand, the structure of metal oxide nanoparticles was rationally designed to enhance the charge separation and to achieve overall water splitting. Firstly, a novel photocatalyst (C-doped Al2O3) converted from the well-known insulator, Al2O3, was successfully developed. It was for the first time used in the solar water splitting system and showed good photocatalytic performance. In order to reveal the intrinsic mechanism of this new earth-abundant photocatalyst, many advanced techniques were conducted such as TEM, AES, STXM, XPS and UPS. Finally, we figured out that the bandgap narrowing is resulting from the mid-gap state formed by the C 2p orbital in the forbidden band. The photocatalytic H2 generation performance indicated the successful transition from insulator to semiconductor. However, the efficiency of the C-doped Al2O3 is expected to be further increased with visible-light irradiation. As we know the solar energy is mostly composed of visible light, therefore, it is very essential to design visible-light active photocatalytic systems. CdS nanomaterials, with a small bandgap (ca. 2.4 eV), is a very well-known and promising photocatalytic materials for visible-light water splitting. However, CdS nanoparticles notoriously tend to aggregate, leading to the increment of the charge recombination rate. Herein, 3D echinus-like titanate nanomaterials with the anti-aggregation structure was designed and successfully synthesized, in which CdS nanoparticles are spatially distributed. And we found that the 3D CdS-titanate composite showed excellent photocatalytic performance than that of the pure CdS under visible light. This is owing to the quick electron injection from the CdS to titanate (~ 0.33 ns), supported by the transient absorption (TA) measurement, which greatly enhance the separation of the photoinduced electron/hole pairs on CdS.
author2 School of Materials Science & Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science & Engineering
Zhang, Yanyan
format Theses and Dissertations
author Zhang, Yanyan
author_sort Zhang, Yanyan
title Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
title_short Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
title_full Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
title_fullStr Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
title_full_unstemmed Rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
title_sort rational engineering of metal oxide nanomaterials for solar-driven water splitting
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51112
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