Splitting Water with Sunlight
Researchers from the German Max
Planck Institute have now developed a catalyst that may do
just that. As they report in the journal Angewandte
Chemie, titanium disilicide splits water into
hydrogen and oxygen. And the semiconductor doesn’t just
act as a photocatalyst, it also stores the gases produced,
which allows an elegant separation of hydrogen and oxygen.
“The generation of hydrogen and oxygen from water by means
of semiconductors is an important contribution to the use of
solar energy,” explains Martin Demuth (of the Max Planck
Institute for Bioinorganic Chemistry in Mülheim an der
Ruhr). “Semiconductors suitable for use as photocatalysts
have been difficult to obtain, have unfavorable
light-absorption characteristics, or decompose during the
reaction.”
Demuth and his team have now proposed a class of
semiconductors that have not been used for this purpose
before: Silicides. For a semiconductor, titanium disilicide
(TiSi2) has very unusual optoelectronic properties that are
ideal for use in solar technology. In addition, this
material absorbs light over a wide range of the solar
spectrum, is easily obtained, and is inexpensive.
At the start of the reaction, a slight formation of oxide on
the titanium disilicide results in the formation of the
requisite catalytically active centers. “Our catalyst splits
water with a higher efficiency than most of the other
semiconductor systems that also operate using visible
light,” says Demuth.