Interfacial Processes at H2O/III-V Semiconductor Surfaces under Operando Conditions (Prof. Sylwia Ptasinska, Notre Dame University)

Desde Mayo 23, 2017 15:30 hasta Mayo 23, 2017 16:30

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Sylwia Ptasinska es Profesora en el Radiation Laboratory and Department of Physics, Notre Dame University, y forma parte del Steering Committee de Notre Dame en el "International Doctoral Program in Science" que además incluye a KU Leuven, U. Católica Sacro Cuore, Bescia y PUC.

Interfacial Processes at H2O/III-V Semiconductor Surfaces under Operando Conditions

A photoelectrochemical (PEC) solar cell used for hydrogen production through water splitting offers an efficient approach to the future sustainable supply of energy. However, its performance is directly related to electronic and chemical properties of an electrolyte/photoelectrode interface.
III-V semiconductors exhibit many favorable properties that make them promising candidates for a photoelectrode of a PEC solar cell. Therefore, our recent attention was focused on Ga- and In-based materials for photoelectrodes and their interactions particulary with gas-phase H2O molecules. We used ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) to track the physicochemical processes that occur on the III-V surfaces over wide ranges of pressure and temperature, thus approaching the operational conditions of PEC cells.
We were able to provide a better understanding ofoperando conditions.
In addition, we showed that coupling with first-principles simulations allows one to correlate electronic properties with local interfacial chemistry, and to probe chemical and morphological changes induced by the surface oxidation of III-V photoelectrodes.