Abstract
A photoelectrochemical (PEC) water-splitting device integrates a photovoltaic cell and electrocatalysts into a single device to produce hydrogen fuel from water using solar irradiance. The major driving force behind PEC research is that it can potentially be a cost-efficient way to produce hydrogen in a renewable way, however, current PEC devices for hydrogen production are not economically viable yet. This review provides comprehensive discussions on the major challenges on practical solar hydrogen production by PEC from the standpoint of device structure and light absorber materials. We started by systematically classifying PEC device structures based on the electrical junctions on the light absorber materials. Based on the classification scheme, we showed that the choices of a device structure and light absorber materials are cross-linked in current PEC studies and affects electron/ion transport in a PEC device. The correlation between the device structure and materials underlines the necessity of reviewing the light absorber materials for the top and bottom cells in a tandem PEC device as a whole. We categorize the light absorber materials based on their crustal abundance because it is a major factor that determines device structure and scalability in TW-scale, and discuss their influence on the efficiency, stability, and scalability of a PEC water-splitting system.
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1 Introduction
Global consensus [1, 2] on regulating carbon emission via the transition from fossil fuels to alternative emission-free energy carriers has been reached to mitigate climate change. One of the most promising clean energy carriers is hydrogen because it releases only water during its combustion and can be in principle produced from water using renewable energy sources without greenhouse gas emissions. With the recent advances in solar cell technology, connecting a photovoltaic (PV) cell and electrocatalyst (EC) for solar hydrogen production is being considered as a potentially viable option. Nevertheless, industrial solar hydrogen production by the combination of PV and EC still requires significant developments and policy-level supports because the cost of hydrogen production by the PV + EC is still much higher than fossil fuel-based technologies such as steam methane reforming [3].
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting device integrates PV and EC into a single concise structure to make solar hydrogen production more feasible. In a PEC device structure, a semiconductor light absorber is immersed in an electrolyte with EC on its surface, and the photovoltage generated from the light absorber drives the electrochemical water splitting reaction directly over the surface. Because the photocurrent is distributed over the large surface of the solar cell rather than concentrated into a separate water electrolyzer, PEC device can operate at a much lower current density (10–20 mA/cm2) than water electrolyzer (1–2 A/cm2), and it results in a lower loss by an electrochemical overpotential from water-splitting catalysts [4]. In addition, photoexcited charge carriers from a PEC device participate in the electrochemical reaction on-site, whereas those from a conventional PV cell have to travel across its large surface and through a wire connection to the EC in the electrolyte. Therefore, PEC devices do not suffer from the ohmic loss from a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) and the wiring between PV-EC, and they also do not require an additional process for surface metallization. This advantage becomes more pronounced when considering the scale-up of the PEC devices for practical solar hydrogen production. Furthermore, the concise PEC device structure can potentially lower the system cost. PEC devices do not need electrodes which are necessary in a water electrolyzer (bipolar plate and porous transport layers), surface metallization necessary for a PV cell (metal grid contact) and power electronics needed for combining PV and EC (AC-DC or DC-DC inverter).
To take these advantages, various types of PEC devices, which usually consist of two or more semiconductor light absorbers with different bandgaps to enable unassisted (i.e., with no external power) water splitting, have been investigated. The construction of the PEC devices requires contacts between the semiconductor and an electrolyte, that is a solid–liquid junction (SLJ), or between the semiconductor and an external electrical circuit by a solid-state junction (SSJ). How to establish the connections through the junctions is an important factor to be considered when designing a PEC device structure. Another important factor is the choice of semiconductor light absorbers because the physical/chemical properties of the semiconductors affect the activity, stability and scalability of a PEC device. In this review, we introduce a systematic classification of PEC devices based on their electrical junctions and discuss which configurations would be beneficial to fully utilize the advantages of PEC. Furthermore, we will also review semiconductor light absorbers materials that have been adopted in various PEC structures and discuss their strengths and weaknesses. Over the course of our discussions, we also point out major challenges of PEC that should be addressed to realize practical solar hydrogen production. We expect that this comprehensive review of the device structure, materials and other critical issues will help guide the direction where research efforts should be focused.
2 Systematic classification of PEC device structures
For the extraction of useful work from a semiconductor light absorber under illumination, photogenerated charge carriers should be extracted through electrical junctions on its front and backside. Conventional PV cells extract charge carriers through SSJ’s (also called a terminal), and the device structure is often named after the number of SSJ’s—for example, “two-terminal” or “three-terminal” devices. On the other hand, PEC devices replace at least one of SSJ’s with a SLJ to drive the water-splitting reaction over its surface, and one can devise many different designs depending on how to replace SSJ’s with SLJ’s. For example, a PEC device consisting one semiconductor with a SLJ on one side and a SSJ on the other is usually called as “photocathode” [5,6,7,8,9] or “photoanode” [10,11,12,13,14,15] depending on the type of charges involved in the reaction at the SLJ. A tandem PEC device, which comprises two semiconductors, are referred as “wired tandem” when connecting a photocathode and a photoanode with an electrical wire (two SLJ and two SSJ), or as “wireless tandem” when integrating the two semiconductors by a recombination layer between them, i.e., two SLJ’s and a recombination layer [16,17,18]. Many alterations to the aforementioned PEC structures have been demonstrated, and the previous works attempt to classify the structures in the order of “design complexity” [17], or “topological variation of a device structure between PV + EC and PEC” [19], which affects the difficulty and process complexity in the device fabrication and/or estimated cost for constructing the structure. Nevertheless, it is ambiguous to quantify the design complexity or topological variation of a certain device structure. To clarify the implications of various PEC device structures on hydrogen production by PEC water splitting, more explicit classification of PEC structures is required.
To develop a systematic structural classification scheme, we first focus on electrical junctions connecting a semiconductor light absorber with surroundings (electrolyte or electrical wire). In the case of the SLJ where the charge carriers directly participate in electrochemical reactions, the reaction is either cathodic or anodic depending on the direction of current flow, and the semiconductor is in contact with an electrolyte with or without a protection layer. Thus, we categorize SLJ into four types: SLJ with cathodic reaction (SLJ-C), SLJ with cathodic reaction and a protection layer (SLJ-PC), SLJ with anodic reaction (SLJ-A) and SLJ with anodic reaction and a protection layer (SLJ-PA). We consider a protection layer if it satisfies the following conditions: the layer is (1) deliberately deposited between a semiconductor and an electrolyte, (2) expected to improve stability of the semiconductor in the PEC environment and (3) thicker than a monolayer thickness. Thus, we do not consider co-catalysts of sub-monolayer thickness, adsorbates or native oxide as a protection layer. With regards to the SSJ where the photoexcited charge carriers are extracted to an outer circuit, it is divided as follows: transparent SSJ (SSJ-T), opaque SSJ (SSJ-O). TCO or a patterned metal contact, which is usually deposited on the optical front side of a semiconductor, is a good example of SSJ-T. Meanwhile, SSJ-O is usually applied on the backside where optical transparency is not needed, and it can be constructed by a simple metal layer. In addition, a recombination layer (SSJ-R) is mainly used to monolithically integrate two semiconductors. The 7 different electrical junctions are summarized in Table 1. In this classification scheme, the key difference between SSJ (except SSJ-R) and SLJ is the length of electrical charge transport to drive the PEC reactions. Electrical charges in SSJ-T or SSJ-O have to travel in a lateral direction across a large device surface (see Fig. 1a). On the other hand, the electrical charges in SLJ need to travel only across the thickness of a device, which is typically in the order of a micrometer thickness (see Fig. 1b). The rest of the charge transport is covered by ions in the electrolyte, and the direction and distance of ion transport largely depend on the design of a PEC cell as they travel through the bulk of the electrolyte.
The structure of a PEC device can be classified by the series of electrical junctions placed on semiconductors along the path of an incident light. For example, a photocathode consisting of one semiconductor which has one SLJ with a protection layer on its optical front side and one SSJ on its backside (Fig. 2a) can be described as [SLJ-PC/SSJ-O]. Likewise, wired tandem PEC device and wireless tandem PEC device depicted in Fig. 1b and c can be expressed as [SSJ-T/SLJ-A] [SLJ-PC/SSJ-O] and [SLJ-A/SSJ-R/SLJ-PC], respectively.
As mentioned before, the advantage of PEC over PV + EC lies in (1) an extended surface area reducing the current density and therefore overpotentials, (2) SLJ consuming photo-excited charge carriers on-site without transporting across a large area and (3) potential cost reduction from simplifying device structure. While any PEC devices dispersing water-splitting catalysts over the wide surface of the light absorber can take the first advantage, the second advantage—minimization of Ohmic losses from TCO’s and power electronics—can be only exploited when losses from ionic transport in a PEC reactor is successfully minimized as well. The ion transport may exhibit ohmic loss from the resistance of electrolyte or pH-gradient loss from local pH variation at the surface of electrodes. There have been studies showing that the losses from the ion transport can be reduced by using a highly acidic (pH 0 or lower) or alkaline (pH 14 or higher) electrolyte [20], designing a PEC reactor with a better ion transport [20,21,22], and flowing an electrolyte continuously [23] (which is necessary for a practical device operation). In this regard, monolithic wireless PEC devices, such as [SLJ-A/SSJ-R/SLJ-C] or [SLJ-C/SSJ-R/SLJ-A] (analogous to Fig. 1c) would be the most ideal structure because they can dramatically reduce electrical ohmic loss by eliminating the need for a long distance carrier transport over the area of the PEC device. One may dispute that the monolithic wireless structures may pose issues associated with ohmic or pH-gradient loss from ion transport between the cathode and the anode; however, there are early works on PEC devices and reactor designs showing a minimal loss from the electrolyte by using a louvered cell [20] or a perforated cell [21]. Nevertheless, the monolithic wireless configurations have not been extensively investigated, which is most likely due to many complexities and difficulties in the device fabrication and characterization. Most of the reported monolithic wireless tandem devices have been limited to III-V semiconductors or amorphous silicon cells because other light absorbers do not have well-established SSJ-R to integrate them in a tandem configuration. Additionally, characterization of a wireless PEC tandem device is not trivial because it does not have any direct electrical wiring to a potentiostat. Therefore, the performance of the device can be only characterized by collecting gaseous products, which is experimentally more difficult, though more relevant, than collecting electrical charges. We argue that, despite the challenges, the wireless device would be the most ideal PEC structure that can fully exploit the advantages of PEC. Another compromised, yet still attractive, structure is a monolithic PEC device with one SSJ-O wired to a separate EC, such as [SLJ-A/SSJ-R/SSJ-O] or [SLJ-C/SSJ-R/SSJ-O]. Although electrical charges are transported along SSJ-O to EC over a long distance, it is easier to acquire a low sheet resistance at a lower cost compared to SSJ-T.
In PEC devices that include SSJ-T lateral electrical charge transport within a TCO layer results in a severe efficiency loss from ohmic resistance, especially when the device becomes larger for practical solar hydrogen production. A previous theoretical study estimated a voltage loss of ~ 350 mV from two TCO layers when the lateral dimension of the device was scaled up to ~ 8 cm (TCO conductivity: 105 S/m, TCO thickness: 500 nm, current density: 10 mA/cm2) [23]. Another theoretical study [24] predicted that enlarging lab-scale (~ 1 cm2) PEC devices to a more practical size (~ 100 cm2) would lead to 20–30% reduction in the photocurrent (calculation parameters are adapted from other experimental works). A previous experimental study [25] showed confirmed that enlarging a BiVO4 photoanode with SSJ-T from 0.24 to 50 cm2 reduced the photocurrent by ~ 65%, but the depletion of ions in the neutral electrolyte also contributed to the efficiency loss in this case. We notice that some PEC devices categorized as “wireless” include SSJ-T in their structure as shown in Fig. 3 [26, 27]. In our classification scheme, these structures are effectively “wired” configuration because a similar level of efficiency loss from SSJ-T is expected when the devices are scaled up. To avoid the ohmic loss from the lateral transport, a metal grid can be introduced to SSJ-T [28]; however, introducing the additional patterning process for the metal grid nullifies the advantage of PEC, that is simplified manufacturing process and reduced system cost. Additionally, the metal grid reduces the active area for light absorption.
Despite of these shortcomings from SSJ-T, current research on PEC devices is inclined to the structures with SSJ-T as they are easier to be prepared and tested. Figure 4 presents a collection of previous studies [7, 8, 11, 21, 26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74] on PEC water-splitting devices—solar-to-hydrogen (STH) conversion efficiencies versus the number of SSJ-T’s. The shape of data points represents the existence of SSJ-T in a device structure (circle: a structure without SSJ-T, rectangle: a structure with SSJ-T). The number of concentric circle or square represents the number of light absorbers in a PEC device. More specifically, the outer, middle (for three light absorbers) and inner circle or square corresponds to the top, middle (for three light absorbers) and bottom cell in a PEC device, respectively. The color of each circle or square represents a light absorber material (red: halide perovskite, green: earth-abundant metal oxide, blue: crystalline Si, light blue: amorphous Si, purple: any materials containing rare-earth elements such as In, As or Ge, yellow: others). The light absorber materials marked in purple (rare-earth) are mostly III-V solar cells and some Cu(In, Ga)(S, Se)2, and yellow (others) are mostly earth-abundant chalcogenides or organic solar cells. The size of the datapoints are proportional to the amount of hydrogen produced over the lifetime of a PEC device (lifetime-H2), and it represents the stability of the device. The lifetime-H2 value is acquired from gas chronoamperometry (or other gas collection methods) when it is available, or it is estimated from chronoamperometry assuming 100% Faradaic efficiency. It is clear from Fig. 4 that PEC devices based on earth-abundant materials (red, green, blue and yellow) except amorphous silicon (light blue) are more likely to be constructed with SSJ-T than those based on III-V semiconductors with rare elements (purple data points). The preference toward the structures containing SSJ-T must be due to the difficulties in finding a suitable candidate for SSJ-R and monolithically integrating them into a tandem device. For III-V semiconductors, which have been heavily investigated for concentrated PV application, monolithic integration of two or more III-V’s via SSJ-R has been well established. On the contrary, the development of SSJ-R’s for many earth-abundant metal-oxide materials is still under investigation, and most of the tandem devices based on earth-abundant metal-oxide have relied on coupling separate photoelectrodes using SSJ-T. However, as discussed before, tandem PEC devices employing SSJ-T pose limitations in terms of large scaling and system cost, therefore, we need to steer our efforts towards the wireless construction including SSJ-R to realize PEC water splitting as a means for practical solar hydrogen production.
Another important factor that should be considered for a viable deployment of PEC is the collection and storage of high purity hydrogen at high pressure, and it requires hermetical sealing, gas separation membrane and operation at elevated pressure. In this sense, PEC structures producing hydrogen over a large area may appear less attractive than other structures with a separate hydrogen-producing EC because of difficulties in ensuring reliable sealing [75]. Furthermore, hydrogen produced over a large area with a low current density in a pressurized reactor would increase hydrogen concentration in an oxygen compartment (or vice versa), and it may even reach a hazardous level depending on the PEC reactor design [76, 77]. Therefore, a monolithic photoanode which can separate a hydrogen-producing counter electrode, for example [SLJ-A/SSJ-R/SSJ-O], can potentially be more beneficial compared to the other structures producing hydrogen over a large area. Separating hydrogen-producing EC by using SSJ-O provides flexibility in the reactor design, at the cost of the Ohmic loss from the charge transport over a long distance, and it may facilitate sealing the PEC cell hermetically. Moreover, some previous studies introduced redox mediators to isolate HER from PEC reactor to avoid any possibility of the product crossover [78, 79].
3 Semiconductor light absorber materials
As well as the device structure, the choice of a light absorber material is one of the most critical factors affecting various aspects of device performance such as STH efficiency, stability and scalability of a PEC device. The theoretical maximum of STH efficiency is determined by the band gaps of the light absorber materials. Previous theoretical studies [80, 81] have shown that, in the cases of PEC devices consisting of two light absorbers, the optimal combination of the band gaps are ~ 1.8 eV and ~ 1.1 eV, respectively, in view of Shockley-Queisser limit, electrocatalytic overpotentials and the light absorption by water. However, actual STH efficiencies tend to be lower than the theoretical expectations because of a charge collection efficiency that is less than unity and other parasitic losses. Concerning the overall stability of a PEC device, the electrochemical stability of the materials is the main concern because they are in direct contact with (or in close vicinity of) electrolytes at SLJ. Light absorbers with poor electrochemical stability may limit the operational range of pH’s of electrolyte or alternatively force the structures with SSJ rather than SLJ to be employed. Along with the electrochemical stability, the stability in air or device fabrication environments also needs attention. Regarding the scalability, we discussed that ohmic loss would limit the practical size of a PEC device to several centimeters. Another consideration on the scalability issue is the natural abundance of materials. When considering world energy consumption [82], an energy conversion device should be scalable to TW-scale. Building PEC devices capable of producing fuels in terawatt-scale would require several hundreds kilo-tons/TW of light absorber materials [83], and therefore, materials with enough global supply are of greater interest. To maximize these performance parameters (STH efficiency, stability and scalability), all semiconductor materials constituting each cell and device should be taken into account simultaneously. In the following sections, we will survey combinations of materials together with compatible device structures used for constructing PEC devices and assess them in terms of STH efficiency, stability and scalability, and a broad outline of the survey is summarized in Table 2.
3.1 Earth-abundant top cell/crystalline silicon
Although single crystalline silicon has poor light absorbance and requires an energy-intensive ingot growth process, it has gained popularity and dominance in the PV market over other competing technologies because of its wide availability [84]. The bandgap of silicon is 1.12 eV, which is an ideal value as a bottom cell for a double-junction tandem PEC device. In coupling with a silicon bottom cell, various earth-abundant metal oxides have been investigated as a top cell to retain the scalability of tandem devices in TW scale [58, 64, 68, 85]. Metal oxides with various compositions providing opportunities for tuning bandgap and optoelectronic properties have been widely studied [86], however, most metal oxides have sluggish carrier transport properties because of strong electron–phonon interaction originating from the highly ionic bonding nature [87,88,89]. In addition, a carrier lifetime tends to be shorter than other PV materials due to fast recombination at bulk defects or surface states [89]. As such, metal oxides in general produce much smaller photovoltage and photocurrent compared to maximum theoretically predicted values. Thus, recent metal oxide photoelectrode studies focus on improving charge transfer kinetics by various strategies: (1) introducing an internal electric field via forming heterojunction to facilitate electron–hole separation [90], (2) adding dopants to enhance bulk conductivity and reduce bulk recombination [91, 92], and (3) nanostructuring surface to facilitate charge collection [93]. As of now, unassisted solar water splitting by a tandem device based on metal oxide and crystalline silicon has been rarely demonstrated yet [58, 64, 68, 85] because photovoltage and photocurrent from the metal oxide top cell are still much lower than the theoretical limits. Among earth-abundant candidates for a top cell in tandem PEC cells with a silicon bottom cell, BiVO4 has been the most successful material thanks to better carrier transporting properties than other metal oxides and its large band gap (2.4 eV) that allows a high photovoltage. Several BiVO4/crystalline Si studies have reported unassisted solar water splitting but the reported STH efficiencies remain in the range of 0–1% [58, 64]. There have been attempts to increase a photovoltage from a bottom cell by replacing the crystalline silicon with other earth-abundant light absorbers with a larger bandgap; however, the larger photovoltage is accompanied by the reduced photocurrent, resulting in the loss of STH efficiency. Considering the ideal combination of the band gaps, one may find metal chalcogenides or metal halides with superior optoelectronic properties as an attractive candidate for the top cell instead of metal oxides. For example, a dry tandem solar cell consisting of a metal halide perovskite and crystalline silicon has made rapid progress in recent years, achieving the power conversion efficiency of 29% [94] and this could be applied to PEC energy conversion with proper protection against a liquid electrolyte. Perovskite/crystalline Si does not contain rare-earth elements and it has already demonstrated exceptionally high power conversion efficiency, and therefore it has merits in STH efficiency and TW scalability.
However, for any PEC device that makes a junction between a light absorber and an electrolyte, the electrochemical stability of the materials is a prime concern. Light absorbers that are stable in a highly acidic or alkaline electrolyte are preferred because it would be much easier to design a PEC cell with a low pH gradient and ohmic losses from ion transport. One of the main reasons behind the popularity of Fe2O3 photoanode is its stability in alkaline electrolytes. On the other hand, BiVO4 is stable only in a near-neutral range (pH 4–10), and scaling up BiVO4 PEC device would pose a significant challenge in designing a PEC reactor due to high electrical resistance of the electrolyte. Figure 5 shows STH efficiencies reported from previous studies depending on pH’s of electrolytes and device configuration (PV + PEC configuration represents a wire-connection between a PEC device with SLJ and conventional PV-like device.). As can be confirmed from Fig. 5a and b, metal oxide materials (green) are mostly tested in the near-neutral pH range because of the stability issue. For the operation in a highly acidic or alkaline electrolyte, a protection layer should be deposited over the surface of a light absorber to avoid direct contact with the electrolyte. Protecting SLJ for the operation under dark can be easily achieved by depositing a thick and dense layer on a clean surface [74] or attaching a metal substrate [95] (shown in Fig. 5c). For illumination conditions, SLJ is usually protected by a large bandgap oxide thin film. Depending on the electrochemical reaction on its surface, the oxide layer should be either n-type or p-type for transporting electrons or holes, respectively. TiO2 has been widely used as an electron transporting protection layer due to its transparency and stability over a broad range of pH’s [96]. Interestingly, TiO2 turns out to be compatible with either n-type or buried p–n junction silicon photoanode [97,98,99,100] although TiO2 is intrinsically n-type oxide. To protect a photoanode in alkaline electrolytes, p-type NiO is an attractive option as it is a large bandgap (~ 3.6 eV) p-type semiconductor [101]. Besides, NiO can also serve as a good OER catalyst in alkaline electrolytes. Other noble metal oxide protection layers such as CoOx, SnO2 and Nb2O5 are noteworthy [96], and introducing a proper protection layer would broaden the scope of available light absorber materials for PEC application. However, the most critical issue in the protection layer is ensuring a complete impermeability over the entire surface area of a light absorber. For example, small foreign particles sitting on a surface may introduce pin holes in the protection layer, and the presence of a single pinhole would lead to the corrosion of the entire light absorber underneath the protection layer.
The challenge in the impermeability becomes clear when it comes to metal halide perovskites, which are discussed as an attractive top cell material in terms of STH efficiency and TW scalability. The metal halide perovskites are very unstable when in contact with oxygen, and the degradation is accelerated in the presence of water molecules. Thus, depositing an impermeable protection layer is vital for applying SLJ on a halide perovskite absorber, which is not a trivial task. As shown in Fig. 5a, most previous studies with a halide perovskite are tested in PV + PEC configuration [27, 32, 34,35,36, 40, 57, 69,70,71], which encapsulates the halide perovskite by using SSJ-T like a conventional PV. There is a previous work [102] on improving the impermeability of TiO2 protection layer on a halide perovskite photocathode by atomic layer deposition, and it demonstrated around 2 h of lifetime. With such an effort to improve the impermeability, the very appealing optoelectronic properties of halide perovskite materials could be utilized without the losses from SSJ-T.
With regards to the stability of silicon bottom cell, it can benefit from the previous studies on transparent protection layers for silicon photoelectrodes [9, 14, 15, 97,98,99,100, 103,104,105,106]. The silicon photoelectrodes in acidic electrolytes are mostly stable even with an imperfect protection layer by forming a native oxide layer between the protection layer and silicon, but less stable in alkaline electrolytes [98]. In cases of monolithic devices, however, transparent SLJ is not necessary for silicon (or any other) bottom cell because an electrochemical reaction always takes place at a dark side while the optical front side is covered with a top cell.
3.2 Epitaxial III-V thin films
III-V semiconductor light absorbers epitaxially grown on a seed wafer possesses outstanding optoelectronic properties and solar cells based on these materials have achieved record-high power conversion efficiencies [107]. Moreover, tandem devices based on III-V light absorbers have well-established processes for recombination layers. Accordingly, PEC devices comprising III-V semiconductors demonstrated the highest STH efficiencies as shown in Figs. 4, 5 and 6 [8, 38, 44,45,46, 49, 51, 59,60,61,62,63, 74]. Structures without SSJ-T would be preferred because they can avoid using a complicated combination of materials often required to place a metal grid contact on a III-V light absorber. Thus, a wireless monolithic structure or monolithic structure with one SSJ-O has been a popular choice for III-V based tandem PEC devices as shown in Fig. 5b and c. However, scalability in TW scale would be severely limited due to the scarcity of indium and gallium. Hence, there have been efforts to minimize the loading of III-V materials in PEC devices by taking similar approaches used for III-V solar cells [108]. Because most of the incidence of light can be absorbed by a III-V film of only several hundred-nanometer thicknesses, a single crystal seed wafer with hundred-micrometer thickness is not an integral part of a PEC device. Therefore, exfoliation and transfer of a III-V thin film to another substrate allows the possibility of reusing the seed wafer for another epitaxial growth, which can reduce the consumption of expensive III-V materials [62]. Another approach to improve electricity production per raw material usage is the use of concentrating incoming light on a small PEC device [59, 109]. A concentrated PEC reactor would be operating with a high current density possible at an elevated temperature and therefore requires significant efforts for balancing many factors (thermodynamic voltage, charge carrier recombination, ohmic losses from components), which will result in both beneficial and adverse effects. In addition, it should be noted that the concentrated PEC reactor may utilize waste heat from a reactor while cycling an electrolyte [109].
Another challenge that needs to be overcome is the stability of III-V materials in electrochemical environments because most III-V materials are stable only in the near-neutral pH. Similar to the metal oxides or silicon, protection layers can be applied to III-V to avoid a direct contact with an electrolyte. III-V light absorbers have a better chance to improve the impermeability of a protection layer by growing a protection layer epitaxially in the same growth chamber without exposing them to atmosphere. For example, a GaInP protection layer with only 10 nm thickness improves the stability of a PEC device significantly [62], although the stability of GaInP in acid may not be good enough for long-term operation for a practical application.
4 Conclusion and outlook
According to the techno-economic analyses [110,111,112], a significant level of development is necessary to realize a practical solar hydrogen production by PEC. The analyses show that current PEC devices need significant improvement, especially in stability, while keeping the system cost as low as possible. The most limiting factor in stability of a PEC device is the electrochemical stability of light absorber materials, and the system cost would be heavily dependent on a PEC device structure. Therefore, in this review, we introduce the pressing/potential issues in PEC within the framework of device structures and light absorber materials. We address that our research efforts should be focused on (1) the optimization of a PEC reactor design for electrical/ionic charge transport and (2) a reliable collection of H2 product. It is also essential to develop an efficient, stable and scalable large bandgap (~ 1.8 eV) light absorber materials. There have been two different approaches to light absorber development, which are (3) improving the efficiency of earth-abundant light absorber materials and developing SSJ-R for monolithic integration, or (4) overcoming the TW-scalability issue of rare-earth light absorbers. (5) Besides, both types of materials require a significant improvement in stability.
Electrical/ionic charge transport through a PEC device and reactor should be finely optimized and result in lower losses compared to that in PV + EC. We suggested a classification scheme for PEC device structure that can clarify the electron/ion transport characteristics of a PEC device, and argued that device structures without SSJ-T can minimize the loss from electrical charge transport over a long distance. Optimization of ion transport in PEC reactor is in the early stage of development, and the losses from the ion transport can be minimized by circulating an electrolyte with an extreme pH with a high flow rate and developing a novel PEC reactor design.
The collection of hydrogen should not be overlooked, especially when using a device structure producing hydrogen over a large surface of a light absorber at elevated pressure. Although it is not straightforward to estimate costs for hermetic sealing over a large area and figure out the gas product crossover through a membrane in a pressurized PEC cell in this stage, the structures with a separate hydrogen-producing EC might be attractive for the facile collection of hydrogen.
Silicon is an ideal light absorber material for a bottom cell, however, suitable light absorber materials for a top cell that can be monolithically integrated on silicon have not been developed yet. We categorize the light absorber materials based on crustal abundance (earth-abundant/rare-earth), which is the main factor that determines the scalability in TW-scale, and each category of materials has different issues. Earth-abundant materials would be scalable to TW-scale, however, they show much lower STH efficiencies than the rare-earth materials because of poor optoelectronic properties. In addition, tandem devices based on earth-abundant materials are mostly tested with a device structure with SSJ-T due to the lack of recombination layer, but it may limit the scaling up of the PEC device to larger than cm-scale because of the electrical losses from SSJ-T.
On the other hand, previous studies based on rare-earth materials show superior STH efficiency in monolithic device structures, but they rely on scarce elements such as In, As and Ge. Therefore, efforts should be directed to the epitaxial thin film transfer or concentrated PEC in order to overcome the poor TW-scalability. In addition, concentrated PEC may provide the chance to utilize waste heat from a PEC reactor so that it can further enhance its economic feasibility.
We also emphasized that the stability of PEC devices is not satisfactory yet for practical solar hydrogen production. Ben-Naim et al. [38] proposed the concept of lifetime-H2 and claimed that lifetime-H2 should be larger than ~ 100 L/cm2 to acquire economic feasibility. However, the state-of-art PEC devices generate around ~ 0.1 L/cm2 over their lifetime as shown in Fig. 7, and there is still around three orders of magnitude discrepancy between the goal and the current level. The stability of a PEC device would be enhanced by ensuring the complete impermeability to avoid direct contact between a light absorber material and an electrolyte.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government. (No. 2021M3I3A1085009). This research was supported by the Nano Material Technology Development Program (Green Nano Technology Development Program) through the NRF funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (No. 2018M3A7B4065662).
Funding
This work was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) Grant funded by the Korean government. (No. 2021M3I3A1085009). This research was supported by the Nano Material Technology Development Program (Green Nano Technology Development Program) through the NRF funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (No. 2018M3A7B4065662).
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Both the authors contributed to the conceptualization. Literature search and analysis were performed by CM. The first draft of the manuscript was written by CM and all authors commented on previous versions of the manuscript. Both the authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Moon, C., Shin, B. Review on light absorbing materials for unassisted photoelectrochemical water splitting and systematic classifications of device architectures. Discov Mater 2, 5 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s43939-022-00026-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s43939-022-00026-2