4.6 Article

Direct solar-to-hydrogen conversion via inverted metamorphic multi-junction semiconductor architectures

Journal

NATURE ENERGY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nenergy.2017.28

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DGE1144083]
  2. EU Marie Curie Fellowship [300971]
  3. US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, Fuel Cell Technologies Office [DE-AC36-08GO28308]
  4. National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Solar water splitting via multi-junction semiconductor photoelectrochemical cells provides direct conversion of solar energy to stored chemical energy as hydrogen bonds. Economical hydrogen production demands high conversion efficiency to reduce balance-of-systems costs. For sufficient photovoltage, water-splitting efficiency is proportional to the device photocurrent, which can be tuned by judicious selection and integration of optimal semiconductor bandgaps. Here, we demonstrate highly efficient, immersed water-splitting electrodes enabled by inverted metamorphic epitaxy and a transparent graded buffer that allows the bandgap of each junction to be independently varied. Voltage losses at the electrolyte interface are reduced by 0.55V over traditional, uniformly p-doped photocathodes by using a buried p-n junction. Advanced on-sun benchmarking, spectrally corrected and validated with incident photon-to-current efficiency, yields over 16% solar-to-hydrogen efficiency with GaInP/GaInAs tandem absorbers, representing a 60% improvement over the classical, high-efficiency tandem III-V device.

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