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Photoassisted overall water splitting in a visible light-absorbing dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cell
Youngblood, W. J., Lee, S.-H. A., Kobayashi, Y., Hernandez-Pagan, E. A., Hoertz, P. G., Moore, T. A., Moore, A. L., Gust, D., & Mallouk, T. E. (2009). Photoassisted overall water splitting in a visible light-absorbing dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cell. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 131(3), 926-927. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja809108y
Iridium oxide nanoparticles stabilized by a heteroleptic ruthenium tris(bipyridyl) dye were used as sensitizers in photoelectrochemical cells consisting of a nanocrystalline anatase anode and a Pt cathode. The dye coordinated the IrO2 center dot nH(2)O nanoparticles through a malonate group and the porous TiOz electrode through phosphonate groups. Under visible illumination (lambda > 410 nm) in pH 5.75 aqueous buffer, oxygen was generated at anode potentials positive of -325 mV vs Ag/AgCl and hydrogen was generated at the cathode. The internal quantum yield for photocurrent generation was ca. 0.9%. Steady-state luminescence and time-resolved flash photolysis/transient absorbance experiments were done to measure the rates of forward and back electron transfer. The low quantum yield for overall water splitting in this system can be attributed to stow electron transfer (similar to 2.2 ms) from IrO2 center dot nH(2)O to the oxidized dye. Forward electron transfer does not compete effectively with the back electron transfer reaction from TiO2 to the oxidized dye, which occurred on a time scale of 0.37 ms.