Prevention of surface recombination by electrochemical tuning of TiO2-passivated photocatalysts

ORAL

Abstract

We present a systematic study of photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy of TiO2-passivated GaAs as a function of electrochemical potential in an ionic liquid solution.[1] We observe a 7X increase in the PL intensity as the GaAs transitions from accumulation to depletion due to the applied potential. We attribute this to the excellent control over the surface Fermi level enabled by the high capacitance of the electrochemical double layer and TiO2. In addition to photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy, we also measured the capacitance-potential (i.e., C-V) characteristics of these samples, which indicate flat band potentials that are consistent with these regimes of ion accumulation observed in the photoluminescence measurements. We have also performed electrostatic simulations of these C-V characteristics, which provide a detailed and quantitative picture of the conduction and valence band profiles and charge distribution at the surface of the semiconductor. These simulations also enable us to determine the range of potentials over which the semiconductor surface experiences depletion, inversion, and accumulation of free carriers.

[1] Bingya Hou, Fatemeh Rezaeifar, Jing Qiu, Guangtong Zeng, Rehan Kapadia and Stephen B. Cronin, Applied Physics Letters, Vol: 111, 141603 (2017)

Presenters

  • Bingya Hou

    Electrical Engineering - Electrophysics, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California

Authors

  • Bingya Hou

    Electrical Engineering - Electrophysics, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California

  • Fatemeh Rezaeifar

    Electrical Engineering - Electrophysics, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California

  • Jing Qiu

    Materials Science, University of Southern California

  • Guangtong Zeng

    Chemistry, University of Southern California

  • Rehan Kapadia

    Electrical Engineering - Electrophysics, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California

  • Steve Cronin

    CEMMA, Univ of Southern California, Univ of Southern California, Electrical Engineering - Electrophysics, University of Southern California, University of Southern California