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Solar Fuel Synthesis Using a Semiartificial Colloidal Z-Scheme.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

The integration of enzymes with semiconductor light absorbers in semiartificial photosynthetic assemblies offers an emerging strategy for solar fuel production. However, such colloidal biohybrid systems rely currently on sacrificial reagents, and semiconductor-enzyme powder systems that couple fuel production to water oxidation are therefore needed to mimic an overall photosynthetic reaction. Here, we present a Z-scheme colloidal enzyme system that produces fuel with electrons sourced from water. This "closed-cycle" semiartificial approach utilizes particulate SrTiO3:La,Rh and BiVO4:Mo (light absorbers), hydrogenase or formate dehydrogenase (cocatalyst), and a molecular cobalt complex (a redox mediator). Under simulated solar irradiation, this system continuously generates molecular hydrogen or formate, while co-producing molecular oxygen for 10 h using only sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide as inputs. In-depth analysis using quartz crystal microbalance, photoelectrochemical impedance spectroscopy, transient photocurrent spectroscopy, and intensity-modulated photovoltage spectroscopy provides mechanistic understanding and characterization of the semiconductor-enzyme hybrid interface. This study provides a rational platform to assemble functional semiartificial colloidal Z-scheme systems for solar fuel synthesis.

Description

Journal Title

J Am Chem Soc

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0002-7863
1520-5126

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Horizon Europe UKRI Underwrite ERC (EP/X030563/1)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Marie Sk?odowska-Curie actions (891338)
European Research Council (682833)

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