4.6 Article

Improvement of Hematite as Photocatalyst by Doping with Tantalum

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 118, Issue 30, Pages 16842-16850

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp500395a

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Funding

  1. National Scholarship Fund of the China Scholarship Council [2009674514]
  2. Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences, Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-09ER16119]

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The use of tantalum as a highly effective dopant for hematite photoelectrochemistry (PEC) has shown contradictory results in previous reports. We show here through screening of different compositions by scanning electrochemical microscopy that Ta doping significantly improves the PEC performance of dropcast films on fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO). In studies with larger electrodes, a 2% Ta-doped hematite photoanode fabricated at 500 degrees C shows the highest improvement of photoactivity, which is similar to 32 times higher than pure hematite even under visible light. At fabrication temperature higher than 500 degrees C (e.g., 600, 680 degrees C), the substrate FTO becomes more resistive and the dopant Ta prefers to segregate from the bulk phase (alpha-Fe2O3) and forms tantalum fluoride oxide (TaO2F), which may act as charge-carrier recombination centers, and the corresponding Ta-doped samples show much lower photoactivities. Ta-doped hematite samples show stronger (110) diffraction as compared with the pure alpha-Fe2O3. We show that the doping of Ta induced a preferential growth along the {001} basal plane, which has been reported to have good conductivity. We found the conductivity of the Ta-doped hematite was improved up to at least about one order of magnitude after the incorporation of Ta, with the improved carrier mobility decreasing recombination of the photogenerated holes and electrons.

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