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Naji, M. |
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Motta, Antonella |
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Petrov, R. H. | Madrid |
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Ali, M. A. |
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Azevedo, Nuno Monteiro |
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Bing, Jueming
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article
Integrating low-cost earth-abundant co-catalysts with encapsulated perovskite solar cells for efficient and stable overall solar water splitting
Abstract
<p>Metal halide perovskite solar cells have an appropriate bandgap (1.5–1.6 eV), and thus output voltage (>1 V), to directly drive solar water splitting. Despite significant progress, their moisture sensitivity still hampers their application for integrated monolithic devices. Furthermore, the prevalence of the use of noble metals as co-catalysts for existing perovskite-based devices undermines their use for low-cost H<sub>2</sub> production. Here, a monolithic architecture for stable perovskite-based devices with earth-abundant co-catalysts is reported, demonstrating an unassisted overall solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of 8.54%. The device layout consists of two monolithically encapsulated perovskite (FA<sub>0.80</sub>MA<sub>0.15</sub>Cs<sub>0.05</sub>PbI<sub>2.55</sub>Br<sub>0.45</sub>) solar cells with low-cost earth-abundant CoP and FeNi(OH)<sub>x</sub> co-catalysts as the photocathode and photoanode, respectively. The CoP-based photocathode demonstrates more than 17 h of continuous operation, with a photocurrent density of 12.4 mA cm<sup>−2</sup> at 0 V and an onset potential as positive as ≈1 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE). The FeNi(OH)<sub>x</sub>-based photoanode achieves a photocurrent of 11 mA cm<sup>−2</sup> at 1.23 V versus RHE for more than 13 h continuous operation. These excellent stability and performance demonstrate the potential for monolithic integration of perovskite solar cells and low-cost earth-abundant co-catalysts for efficient direct solar H<sub>2</sub> production.</p>