- Research
Computational and Experimental Identification of an Earth-Abundant Light Absorber for Solar Water Splitting
Yan, Q. et al. Mn2V2O7: An Earth Abundant Light Absorber for Solar Water Splitting. Advanced Energy Materials, DOI: 10.1002/aenm.201401840 (2015).
Scientific Achievement
Computation, synthesis, and spectroscopy are used to first identify and then study the earth-abundant Mn2V2O7 as a highly promising light absorber for photocatalytic water splitting.
Significance & impact
The detailed understanding of β-Mn2V2O7 photoabsorber reveals that it is a unique metal-oxide semiconductor with desirable band gap and near-perfect band alignment to the standard potentials for water splitting. This discovery provides a path toward targeted design of additional metal-oxide light absorbers with excellent optoelectronic properties for solar fuels applications.
Top left: Structure of β-Mn2V2O7 light absorber with MnO6octahedra and V2O7 divanadate units; top right: band structure with electronic bands in the spin-up (black) and spin-down (green) channels; to the right are the site and l-projected electronic densities of states. Bottom Left: Final 20 s with 1 Hz chopped illumination, showing stable photocurrent in excess of 0.1 mA cm-2; bottom right: CBM and VBM in aqueous solution relative to the two water redox potentials.
Research Details
- A density functional theory (DFT) was used to understand the relevant structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of β-Mn2V2O7
- Photoabsorber is synthesized and fully characterized, yielding excellent agreement between theory and experimental measurements.
- In addition, a Mn0.5V0.5Ox sample from a combinatorial composition library was prepared on a conducting substrate, yielding a film characterized by a scanning-drop photoelectrochemical cell. Photoelectrochemical characterization revealed excellent stability and opportunities for improving the photoelectrocatalytic activity to enable efficient photo-driven water splitting.
Contact: qiminyan@lbl.gov, jbneaton@lbl.gov, gregoire@caltech.edu