Mapping quantum yield for (Fe-Zn-Sn-Ti)Ox photoabsorbers using a high throughput photoelectrochemical screening system

ACS Comb Sci. 2014 Mar 10;16(3):120-7. doi: 10.1021/co400081w. Epub 2014 Feb 12.

Abstract

Combinatorial synthesis and screening of light absorbers are critical to material discoveries for photovoltaic and photoelectrochemical applications. One of the most effective ways to evaluate the energy-conversion properties of a semiconducting light absorber is to form an asymmetric junction and investigate the photogeneration, transport and recombination processes at the semiconductor interface. This standard photoelectrochemical measurement is readily made on a semiconductor sample with a back-side metallic contact (working electrode) and front-side solution contact. In a typical combinatorial material library, each sample shares a common back contact, requiring novel instrumentation to provide spatially resolved and thus sample-resolved measurements. We developed a multiplexing counter electrode with a thin layer assembly, in which a rectifying semiconductor/liquid junction was formed and the short-circuit photocurrent was measured under chopped illumination for each sample in a material library. The multiplexing counter electrode assembly demonstrated a photocurrent sensitivity of sub-10 μA cm(-2) with an external quantum yield sensitivity of 0.5% for each semiconductor sample under a monochromatic ultraviolet illumination source. The combination of cell architecture and multiplexing allows high-throughput modes of operation, including both fast-serial and parallel measurements. To demonstrate the performance of the instrument, the external quantum yields of 1819 different compositions from a pseudoquaternary metal oxide library, (Fe-Zn-Sn-Ti)Ox, at 385 nm were collected in scanning serial mode with a throughput of as fast as 1 s per sample. Preliminary screening results identified a promising ternary composition region centered at Fe0.894Sn0.103Ti0.0034Ox, with an external quantum yield of 6.7% at 385 nm.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques
  • Electrochemical Techniques*
  • Iron / chemistry
  • Oxides / chemistry
  • Photochemical Processes
  • Photosensitizing Agents / chemical synthesis
  • Photosensitizing Agents / chemistry*
  • Quantum Theory*
  • Tin / chemistry
  • Titanium / chemistry
  • Zinc / chemistry

Substances

  • Oxides
  • Photosensitizing Agents
  • Tin
  • Titanium
  • Iron
  • Zinc