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OIL AND GAS
Solar hydrogen: Photoanodes made of alpha-SnWO4 promise high efficiencies
by Staff Writers
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jan 27, 2021

TEM-Image of a a-SnWO4 film (green) coated with 20 nm NiOx (pink). At the interface of a-SnWO4 and NiOx an additional interfacial layer can be observed.

Hydrogen is an important factor in a sustainable energy system. The gas stores energy in chemical form and can be used in many ways: as a fuel, a feedstock for other fuels and chemicals or even to generate electricity in fuel cells.

One solution to produce hydrogen in a climate-neutral way is the electrochemical splitting of water with the help of sunlight. This requires photoelectrodes that provide a photovoltage and photocurrent when exposed to light and at the same time do not corrode in water.

Metal oxide compounds have promising prerequisites for this. For example, solar water splitting devices using bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) photoelectrodes achieve already today ~8 % solar-to-hydrogen efficiency, which is close to the material's theoretical maximum of 9 %.

Theoretical limit is 20 % in a-SnWO4
To achieve efficiencies beyond 9 %, new materials with a smaller band gap are needed. The metal oxide a-SnWO4 has a band gap of 1.9 eV, which is perfectly suited for photoelectrochemical water splitting. Theoretically, a photoanode made of this material could convert ~20 % of the irradiated sunlight into chemical energy (stored in the form of hydrogen). Unfortunately, the compound degrades very quickly in an aqueous environment.

Protection against corrosion comes with a price
Thin layers of nickel oxide (NiOx) can protect the a-SnWO4 photoanode from corrosion, but were found to also significantly reduce the photovoltage. To understand why this is the case, a team led by Dr. Fatwa Abdi at the HZB Institute for Solar Fuels has analysed the a-SnWO4/NiOx interface in detail at BESSY II.

Interface explored at BESSY II
"We studied samples with different thicknesses of NiOx with hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (HAXPES) at BESSY II and interpreted the measured data with results from calculations and simulations," says Patrick Schnell, the first author of the study and a PhD student in the HI-SCORE International Research School at HZB.

"These results indicate that a thin oxide layer forms at the interface, which reduces the photovoltage," explains Abdi.

Outlook: better protection layers
Overall, the study provides new, fundamental insights into the complex nature of interfaces in metal oxide-based photoelectrodes. "These insights are very helpful for the development of low-cost, scalable metal oxide photoelectrodes," says Abdi.

a-SnWO4 is particularly promising in this regard. "We are currently working on an alternative deposition process for NiOx on a-SnWO4 that does not lead to the formation of an interfacial oxide layer, which is likely to be SnO2. If this is successful, we expect that the photoelectrochemical performance of a -SnWO4 will increase significantly."

Research paper


Related Links
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin FUr Materialien Und Energie
All About Oil and Gas News at OilGasDaily.com


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OIL AND GAS
Hamburg power plant to be converted into mega-electrolyser for green hydrogen
Hamburg, Germany (SPX) Jan 25, 2021
The companies Vattenfall, Shell, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) and Hamburg's municipal heat supplier Hamburg Warme are planning to build one of the world's largest electrolysers in the Port of Hamburg. The new electrolyser is to have a capacity of 100 megawatts and be built on the site of the former Moorburg coal-fired power plant. The four companies have now signed a Letter of Intent to this end. The Hamburg metropolitan region thus continues to position itself to take a leading position in t ... read more

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