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Photocatalytic Water Splitting for Large-scale Solar-to-chemical Energy Conversion and Storage

Abstract

Sunlight-driven water splitting allows renewable hydrogen to be produced from abundant and environmentally benign water. Large-scale societal implementation of this green fuel production technology within energy generation systems is essential for the establishment of sustainable future societies. Among various technologies, photocatalytic water splitting using particulate semiconductors has attracted increasing attention as a method to produce large amounts of green fuels at low cost. The key to making this technology practical is the development of photocatalysts capable of splitting water with high solar-to-fuel energy conversion efficiency. Furthermore, advances that enable the deployment of water-splitting photocatalysts over large areas are necessary, as is the ability to recover hydrogen safely and efficiently from the produced oxyhydrogen gas. This lead article describes the key discoveries and recent research trends in photosynthesis using particulate semiconductors and photocatalyst sheets for overall water splitting, via one-step excitation and two-step excitation (Z-scheme reactions), as well as for direct conversion of carbon dioxide into renewable fuels using water as an electron donor. We describe the latest advances in solar watersplitting and carbon dioxide reduction systems and pathways to improve their future performance, together with challenges and solutions in their practical application and scalability, including the fixation of particulate photocatalysts, hydrogen recovery, safety design of reactor systems, and approaches to separately generate hydrogen and oxygen from water.

Funding source: The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. QW, HN, AK, TY, and KD thank the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO, project no. P21021) for financial support. TH thanks the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST, grant no. JPMJPR20T9) for financial support. FZ thanks the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21925206) for financial support. ER acknowledges the United Kingdom Research & Innovation (UKRI) for a European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant (EP/X030563/1) and the United Kingdom’s Department of Science, Innovation and Technology and the Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Technologies programme (CIET-2324-83). SA acknowledges support as part of Ensembles of Photosynthetic Nanoreactors (EPN), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the United States Department of Energy, Office of Science under Award Number DE-SC0023431, and the HydroGEN Advanced Water Splitting Materials Consortium, established as part of the Energy Materials Network under the United States Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office under Award Number DE-EE0008838.
Related subjects: Production & Supply Chain
Countries: Japan
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/content/journal7056
2024-12-03
2025-04-12
/content/journal7056
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