Copper oxide-based photocatalysts and photocathodes: Fundamentals and recent advances
Review article, 2021

This work aims at reviewing the most impactful results obtained on the development of Cu-based photocathodes. The need of a sustainable exploitation of renewable energy sources and the parallel request of reducing pollutant emissions in airborne streams and in waters call for new technologies based on the use of efficient, abundant, low-toxicity and low-cost materials. Photoelectrochemical devices that adopts abundant element-based photoelectrodes might respond to these requests being an enabling technology for the direct use of sunlight to the production of energy fuels form water electrolysis (H2) and CO2 reduction (to alcohols, light hydrocarbons), as well as for the degradation of pollutants. This review analyses the physical chemical properties of Cu2O (and CuO) and the possible strategies to tune them (doping, lattice strain). Combining Cu with other elements in multinary oxides or in composite photoelectrodes is also discussed in detail. Finally, a short overview on the possible applications of these materials is presented.

Photocatalysis

Photoelectrochemistry

CO2 reduction reaction

Hydrogen evolution reaction

Water splitting

Cu2O

CuO

Author

Tomasz Baran

SajTom Light Future Sp z oo

Alberto Visibile

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Michael Busch

Aalto University

Xiufang He

University of Milan

Szymon Wojtyla

SajTom Light Future Sp z oo

Sandra Rondinini

University of Milan

Alessandro Minguzzi

University of Milan

Alberto Vertova

University of Milan

Molecules

1420-3049 (ISSN) 14203049 (eISSN)

Vol. 26 23 7271

Subject Categories

Renewable Bioenergy Research

Other Environmental Engineering

Energy Systems

DOI

10.3390/molecules26237271

PubMed

34885863

More information

Latest update

12/13/2021