Unveiling Valence State-Dependent Photocatalytic Water Splitting Activity and Photocathodic Behavior in Visible Light-Active Iridium-Doped BaTiO3

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2024 Feb 21;16(7):8763-8771. doi: 10.1021/acsami.3c16710. Epub 2024 Feb 7.

Abstract

Despite having favorable energetics and tunable optoelectronic properties, utilization of BaTiO3 (BTO) for photocatalytic reactions is limited by its absorption only in the ultraviolet region. To address this challenge, BTO is doped with iridium (Ir) to induce visible light absorption. The visible light-induced photocatalytic H2 generation efficiency is enhanced by 2 orders of magnitude on selective conversion of the Ir valence state from Ir4+ to Ir3+. To understand such intriguing behavior, valence state-dependent changes in the optoelectronic, structural, and surface properties and electronic band structure are comprehensively investigated. The effect of electron occupancy change between Ir4+ (t2g5 eg0) and Ir3+ (t2g6 eg0) and their energetic positions within the band gap is found to significantly influence H2 generation. Besides this, converting Ir4+ to Ir3+ enhanced the photocathodic current and lowered the onset potential. Results aid in designing photocatalysts to efficiently use low-energy photons for enhancing solar H2 production in these emerging BTO-based photocatalysts. Collectively, the observations made in this work highlight the promising application of Ir3+:BTO in z-scheme photocatalysis.

Keywords: BaTiO3; Ir doping; Ir valence state effect; photocatalytic water splitting; photoelectrochemical H2 evolution.