Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
31437 Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology C: Photochemistry Reviews 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Hydrogen generated through photochemical cleavage of water is an important fuel.•Photocatalytic materials for water cleavage perform light harvesting and catalysis.•Colloidal heterostructures based on II–VI semiconductor nanocrystals are reviewed.•They offer light harvesting, charge separation, and photocatalytic functions.

Hydrogen generated through the photochemical cleavage of water using renewable solar energy is considered to be an environmentally friendly chemical fuel of the future, which neither results in air pollution nor leads to the emission of greenhouse gases. The photocatalytic materials for water cleavage are required to perform at least two fundamental functions: light harvesting of the maximal possible part of the solar energy spectrum and a catalytic function for efficient water decomposition into oxygen and hydrogen. Photocatalytic systems based on colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals offer a number of advantages in comparison with photoelectrochemical cells based on bulk electrodes: (i) a broad range of material types are available; (ii) higher efficiencies are expected due to short distance charge transport; (iii) large surface areas are beneficial for the catalytic processes; (iv) flexibility in fabrication and design which also allows for tuning of the electronic and optical properties by employing quantum confinement effects. The presence of co-catalysts on colloidal semiconductors is an important part of the overall design of the photocatalytic colloidal systems necessary to maximize the water splitting efficiency. This review article discusses the rational choice of colloidal nanoheterostructured materials based on light-harvesting II–VI semiconductor nanocrystals combined with a variety of metal and/or non-metal co-catalysts, with optimized light harvesting, charge separation, and photocatalytic functions.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
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