Thin silicon via crack-assisted layer exfoliation for photoelectrochemical water splitting
Loading...
Date
Authors
Lee, Yonghwan
Gupta, Bikesh
Tan, Hark Hoe
Jagadish, Chennupati
Oh, Jihun
Karuturi, Siva Krishna
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cell Press
Abstract
Silicon (Si) has been widely investigated as a feasible material for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting. Compared to thick wafer-based Si, thin Si (<50 μm thickness) could concurrently minimize the material usage allowing the development of cost-effective and flexible photoelectrodes for integrable PEC cells. This work presents the design and fabrication of thin Si using crack-assisted layer exfoliation method through detailed optical simulations and a systematic investigation of the exfoliation method. Thin free-standing Si photoanodes with sub-50 μm thickness are demonstrated by incorporating a nickel oxide (NiOx) thin film as oxygen evolution catalyst, light-trapping surface structure, and a rear-pn+ junction, to generate a photo-current density of 23.43 mA/cm2 with an onset potential of 1.2 V (vs. RHE). Our work offers a general approach for the development of efficient and cost-effective photoelectrodes with Si films with important implications for flexible and wearable Si-based photovoltaics and (opto)electronic devices.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
iScience
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution License
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description