High carrier mobility along the [111] orientation in Cu2O photoelectrodes
Linfeng Pan, Linjie Dai, Oliver J. Burton, Lu Chen, Virgil Andrei, Youcheng Zhang, Dan Ren, Jinshui Cheng, Linxiao Wu, Kyle Frohna, Anna Abfalterer, Terry Chien‐Jen Yang, Wenzhe Niu, Meng Xia, Stephan Hofmann, Paul J. Dyson, Erwin Reisner, Henning Sirringhaus, Jingshan Luo, Anders Hagfeldt, Michaël Grätzel, Samuel D. Stranks
Abstract
Abstract Solar fuels offer a promising approach to provide sustainable fuels by harnessing sunlight 1,2 . Following a decade of advancement, Cu 2 O photocathodes are capable of delivering a performance comparable to that of photoelectrodes with established photovoltaic materials 3–5 . However, considerable bulk charge carrier recombination that is poorly understood still limits further advances in performance 6 . Here we demonstrate performance of Cu 2 O photocathodes beyond the state-of-the-art by exploiting a new conceptual understanding of carrier recombination and transport in single-crystal Cu 2 O thin films. Using ambient liquid-phase epitaxy, we present a new method to grow single-crystal Cu 2 O samples with three crystal orientations. Broadband femtosecond transient reflection spectroscopy measurements were used to quantify anisotropic optoelectronic properties, through which the carrier mobility along the [111] direction was found to be an order of magnitude higher than those along other orientations. Driven by these findings, we developed a polycrystalline Cu 2 O photocathode with an extraordinarily pure (111) orientation and (111) terminating facets using a simple and low-cost method, which delivers 7 mA cm −2 current density (more than 70% improvement compared to that of state-of-the-art electrodeposited devices) at 0.5 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode under air mass 1.5 G illumination, and stable operation over at least 120 h.