Khnayzer, Rony S.; PHD; SAS; 200501196; Natural Sciences; rony.khnayzer@lau.edu.lb; Lebanese American University
Abstract:
Felix N. Castellano, Advisor
Due to the expected increases on energy demand in the near future, the development of
new catalytic molecular compositions and materials capable of directly converting water, with
the aid of solar photons, into hydrogen becomes obviated. Hydrogen is a combustible fuel and
precious high-energy feedstock chemical. However, for the water-splitting reaction to proceed
efficiently and economically enough for large-scale application, efficient light-absorbing
sensitizers and water splitting catalysts are required. To study the kinetics of the water reduction
reaction, we have used titania (TiO2) nanoparticles as a robust scaffold to photochemically grow
platinum (Pt) nanoparticles from a unique surface-anchored molecular precursor Pt(dcbpy)Cl2
[dcbpy = 4,4’-dicarboxylic acid-2,2’-bipyridine]. The hybrid Pt/TiO2 nanomaterials obtained
were shown to be a superior water reduction catalyst (WRC) in aqueous suspensions when
compared with the benchmark platinized TiO2. In addition, cobalt phosphate (CoPi) water
oxidation catalyst (WOC) was photochemically assembled on the surface of TiO2, and its
structure and mechanism of activity showed resemblance to the established electrochemically
grown CoPi material. Both WRC and WOC described above possessed near unity Faradaic
efficiency for hydrogen and oxygen production respectively, and were fully characterized by
electron microscopy, x-ray absorption spectroscopy, electrochemistry and photochemistry. While
there are established materials and molecules that are able to drive water splitting catalysis, some
of these efficient semiconductors, including titanium dioxide (TiO2) and tungsten trioxide
(WO3), are only able to absorb high-energy (ultraviolet or blue) photons. This high-energy light
represents merely a fraction of the solar spectrum that strikes the earth and the energy content of
those remaining photons is simply wasted. A strategy to mitigate this problem has been
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developed over the years in our laboratory. Briefly, photons of low energy are converted into
higher energy light using a process termed photon upconversion. Using this technique, low
energy photons supplied by the sun can be converted into light of appropriate energy to trigger
electronic transitions in high energy absorbing photoactive materials without any chemical
modification of the latter. We have shown, that this technology is capable of upconverting visible
sunlight to sensitize wide-bandgap semiconductors such as WO3, subsequently extending the
photoaction of these materials to cover a larger portion of the solar spectrum. Besides the
engineering of different compositions that serve as either sensitizers or catalysts in these solar
energy conversion schemes, we have designed an apparatus for parallel high-throughput
screening of these photocatalytic compositions. This combinatorial approach to solar fuels
photocatalysis has already led to unprecedented fundamental understanding of the generation of
hydrogen gas from pure water. The activity of a series of new Ru(II) sensitizers along with
Co(II) molecular WRCs were optimized under visible light excitation utilizing different
experimental conditions. The multi-step mechanism of activity of selected compositions was
further elucidated by pump-probe transient absorption spectroscopy.