Scientists from Forschungszentrum Juelich have developed the first complete and compact design for an artificial photosynthesis system. The team believes this is a decisive step towards applying the water splitting technology. The concept is flexible both with respect to the materials used and in particular, the size of the system.

Test set-up of the prototype for photoelectrochemical water splitting: The complete system is immersed in an aqueous potassium hydroxide solution. Illumination with a daylight lamp generates a voltage of 1.8 Volt in the solar cells, which is used by the electrolyzer (front side, with nickel-foam stripes as anodes and cathodes) to split the water into hydrogen and oxygen. Image Credit: Tobias Dyck/Forschungszentrum Jülich. For the largest view use the Julich press release link above, scroll down to the lower part and click on the image.

Test set-up of the prototype for photoelectrochemical water splitting: The complete system is immersed in an aqueous potassium hydroxide solution. Illumination with a daylight lamp generates a voltage of 1.8 volts in the solar cells, which is used by the electrolyzer (front side, with nickel-foam stripes as anodes and cathodes) to split the water into hydrogen and oxygen. Image Credit: Tobias Dyck/Forschungszentrum Jülich. For the largest view use the Julich press release link above, scroll down to the lower part and click on our choice of the images.

The researchers study and design results have been published in the journal Nature Communications.

The researchers expect that over time the sun and wind will supply the lion’s share of our energy. The fluctuating nature of these renewable energy sources means that current research is focusing more intensively on efficient storage technologies. Like the energy sources themselves, these technologies should be environmentally friendly and affordable.

This trend is particularly apparent in research on direct photoelectrochemical water splitting, that is to say artificial photosynthesis employing a combination of solar cell and electrolyser. In this way, solar energy can be directly converted into the universal storage medium of hydrogen. This process was first investigated in the 1970s, but has only begun to attract increasing attention in recent years. As yet, research has focused on materials science for new absorber materials and catalysts to further improve efficiency.

However, Juelich solar cell researchers Jan-Philipp Becker and Bugra Turan are concentrating on an aspect that has so far largely been neglected: a realistic design that can take this technology from the scientists’ laboratories and put it into practical applications. “To date, photoelectrochemical water splitting has only ever been tested on a laboratory scale,” explained Burga Turan. “The individual components and materials have been improved, but nobody has actually tried to achieve a real application.”

The design created by the two experts from Juelich’s Institute of Energy and Climate Research is clearly different from the usual laboratory experiments. Instead of individual components the size of a finger nail that are connected by wires, the researchers have developed a compact, self-contained system – constructed completely of low-cost, readily available materials.

With a surface area of only 64 cm2, their component still appears relatively small. The innovation is in its flexible design. By continuously repeating the basic unit, it will in future even be possible to fabricate systems that are several square meters in size. The basic unit itself consists of several solar cells connected to each other by a special laser technique. “This series connection means that each unit reaches the voltage of 1.8 volt necessary for hydrogen production,” said Jan-Philipp Becker. “This method permits greater efficiency in contrast to the concepts usually applied in laboratory experiments for scaling up.”

At the moment, the solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of the prototype is 3.9 %. “That doesn’t sound like much,” admitted Bugra Turan. “But naturally this is only the first draft for a complete facility. There’s still plenty of room for improvement.” In fact – the scientists add – natural photosynthesis only achieves an efficiency of one percent.

Jan-Philipp Becker is of the opinion that within a relatively short time the Jülich design could be increased to around 10 % efficiency using conventional solar cell materials. However, there are also other approaches. For instance, perovskites, a novel class of hybrid materials, with which it is already possible to achieve efficiencies of up to 14 %.

Becker explained, “This is one of the big advantages of the new design, which enables the two main components to be optimized separately: the photovoltaic part that produces electricity from solar energy and the electrochemical part that uses this electricity for water splitting.”

The Jülich researchers have patented this concept, which can be flexibly applied for all types of thin-film photovoltaic technology and for various types of electrolyzer. “For the first time, we are working towards a market launch,” says Becker. “We have created the basis to make this reality.”

Perhaps the team has nailed the basics for a photoelectrochemical water splitting system. Lots of independent entrepreneurs have taken a run at it and nothing of note is to be seen in the market so far. This tech is lots harder than it seems. And the German team hasn’t got a storage system on board yet. There is a ways to go.

But academic effort with some money, third party oversight, result replication and the credibility that comes with all these basics could be what the market needs.

That would handle the front end, getting the energy available. The devices to store and use the hydrogen are still developing. Once one of these front end systems is economically proven the intensity for results on the back end will grow exponentially.


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