Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.133, No.32, 12334-12337, 2011
SrNbO2N as a Water-Splitting Photoanode with a Wide Visible-Light Absorption Band
Strontium niobium oxynitride (SrNbO2N) particles were coated on fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) glass and examined as a photoelectrode for water splitting under visible light in a neutral aqueous solution (Na2SO4, pH approximate to 6). SrNbO2N, which has a band gap of ca. 1.8 eV, acted as an n-type semiconductor and generated an anodic photocurrent assignable to water oxidation upon irradiation with visible-light photons with wavelengths of up to 700 nm, even without an externally applied potential. Under visible light (lambda > 420 nm) with an applied potential of +1.0-1.55 V vs RHE, nearly stoichiometric H-2 and O-2 evolution was achieved using a SrNbO2N/FTO electrode modified with colloidal iridium oxide (IrO2) as a water oxidation promoter. This study presents the first example of photo electrochemical water splitting involving an n-type semiconductor with a band gap smaller than 2.0 eV that does not require an externally applied potential.