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1.
Nanotechnology ; 34(46)2023 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37551562

ABSTRACT

3D-ordered porous CdS/AgI/ZnO nanostructures were designed to perform as high-performance photoelectrodes for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water-splitting applications. They rely on the advantages of an extremely large active surface area, high absorption capacity in the visible-light region, fast carrier separation and transportation caused by the intrinsic ladder-like band arrangement. These nanostructures were fabricated by employing a three-stage experiment in a sequence of hard mold-assisted electrochemical deposition, wet chemical method and deposition-precipitation. First, 3D-ordered ZnO nanostructures were electrochemically deposited using a polystyrene film as the sacrificed template. AgI nanoparticles were then decorated on the interfacial ZnO nanostructures by deposition-precipitation. Finally, these binary AgI/ZnO nanoporous networks were thoroughly wet-chemically coated with a CdS film to form a so-called 'ternary interfacial CdS/AgI/ZnO nanostructures'. The PEC water-splitting properties of the fabricated 3D nanostructures were systematically studied and compared. As a result, the highest efficiency of the fabricated 3D-ordered porous CdS/AgI/ZnO measured under the irradiation of solar simulation is about 5.2%, which is relatively 1.5, 3.5 and 11.3 times greater than that of the corresponding CdS/ZnO (3,4%), AgI/ZnO (1.5%) and pristine porous ZnO (0.46%) photoelectrodes, respectively. The significant improvement in the PEC activity is attributed to the enhanced charge separation and transport of ternary photoelectrodes caused by an unconventional ladder-like band arrangement formed between interfacial CdS-AgI-ZnO. Our study provides a promising strategy for developing such ternary photoelectrode generation that possesses higher stability and efficiency towards water-splitting processes.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 33(6)2021 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34654008

ABSTRACT

Highly responsive methanol sensors working at low temperatures are developed using hierarchical ZnO nanorods decorated by Pt nanoparticles. The sensing materials are fabricated following a 3-step process: electrospinning of ZnO nanofibers, hydrothermal growth of hierarchical ZnO nanorods on the nanofibers and UV-assisted deposition of Pt nanoparticles. The morphology, structure and properties of the materials are examined by field-effect scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscope, x-ray diffraction, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, and electrical measurements. The methanol sensing performance is investigated at different working temperatures in the range of 110 °C-260 °C. It is observed that the surface modification of the ZnO hierarchical nanorods by Pt nanoparticles results in a remarkable enhancement of the sensing response toward methanol, which can reach approximately 19 500 times higher than that of the unmodified ZnO nanorods-based sensor. In addition, this modification enables lower working temperatures with an optimum range of 140 °C-200 °C. Based on the achieved results, a methanol sensing mechanism of the Pt/ZnO structure is proposed.

3.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(1)2020 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33396435

ABSTRACT

Nanostructures of titanium nitride (TiN) have recently been considered as a new class of plasmonic materials that have been utilized in many solar energy applications. This work presents the synthesis of a novel nanostructure of TiN that has a nanodonut shape from natural ilmenite ore using a low-cost and bulk method. The TiN nanodonuts exhibit strong and spectrally broad localized surface plasmon resonance absorption in the visible region centered at 560 nm, which is well suited for thermoplasmonic applications as a nanoscale heat source. The heat generation is investigated by water evaporation experiments under simulated solar light, demonstrating excellent solar light harvesting performance of the nanodonut structure.

4.
Nanoscale ; 5(12): 5530-8, 2013 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23673442

ABSTRACT

The electrodes in photoelectrochemical cells responsible for the generation of hydrogen and oxygen by water splitting have been intensively studied because of their high photon-to-electron conversion efficiency. The morphology of nanostructures with these high-efficiency electrodes was systematically compared with the morphology of ZnO structures with vertically aligned nanorod arrays (NA), hollow hemisphere arrays (HA), urchin-like (UL) nanorod arrays, and thin films (TF). The UV-vis light absorption, photoresponse (current-voltage characteristics in the dark and under light), and photoelectrochemistry of the electrodes were measured. The highest photon-to-electron conversion efficiency of 65% at a specific UV wavelength for an electrode with a ZnO UL structure was derived from the UL morphology of high light-trapping efficiency and carrier collection efficiency. The UL morphology also produced a photon-to-electron conversion efficiency of 4.5% under a solar simulator by CdS-sensitization of the ZnO UL electrode. The value was the highest observed thus far among the ZnO-based electrodes. We demonstrated that photoresponse measurement is a practical and simple technique for the estimation of the photon-to-electron conversion efficiency of an electrode.


Subject(s)
Nanowires/chemistry , Zinc Oxide/chemistry , Electrodes , Hydrogen/chemistry , Light , Oxygen/chemistry , Solar Energy , Water/chemistry
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