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Hydrogen production based on a photoactivated nanowire-forest

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Abstract
For several decades, the key challenge associated with thermochemical hydrogen generation has been the achievement of water splitting and catalyst regeneration at low temperatures while maintaining a reasonably high conversion efficiency over many cycles. Herein, we report low-temperature thermochemical hydrogen generation using hierarchically assembled iron oxide nanoarchitectures. Iron oxide nanoparticles conformally deposited onto a SnO2 nanowire forest allowed the splitting of water molecules and the production of hydrogen gas at temperatures of 400-800 °C, with a high specific gas-forming rate as high as ∼25 000 μmol per g per cycle (250 min). More remarkably, deep-ultraviolet photoactivation enabled low-temperature (200 °C) catalyst regeneration and thereby multiple cycles of hydrogen production without any significant coalescence of the oxide nanoparticles nor substantial loss of the water-splitting efficiency. Hierarchically arranged iron oxide nanoarchitectures, in combination with photochemical catalyst regeneration, are promising for practical hydrogen generation by harvesting wasted thermal energy, even at temperatures below 500 °C. © 2016 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Author(s)
Lee, S.Hanif, Z.Seo, K.Lim, T.Shin, H.-M.Park, S.Kim, S.H.Kwak, S.K.Hong, Suk WonYoon, Myung-HanJu, S.
Issued Date
2016-01
Type
Article
DOI
10.1039/c6ta06172a
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/14425
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.4, no.39, pp.14988 - 14995
ISSN
2050-7488
Appears in Collections:
Department of Chemistry > 1. Journal Articles
Department of Materials Science and Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
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