Photoelectrochemical water splitting promises both sustainable energy generation and energy storage in the form of hydrogen. However, the realization of this vision requires laboratory experiments to be engineered into a large-scale technology. Up to now only few concepts for scalable devices have been proposed or realized. Here we introduce and realize a concept which, by design, is scalable to large areas and is compatible with multiple thin-film photovoltaic technologies. The scalability is achieved by continuous repetition of a base unit created by laser processing. The concept allows for independent optimization of photovoltaic and electrochemical part. We demonstrate a fully integrated, wireless device with stable and bias-free operat...
We report the development of a fully-integrated, photoelectrochemical (PEC) device coupling water ox...
Thin film silicon based multi-junction solar cells were developed for application in combined photov...
It has been widely recognised that fossil fuel reserves are not sufficient to cover the energy deman...
The production of synthetic fuels and chemicals from solar energy and abundant reagents offers a pro...
Although photovoltaic–electrochemical (PV–EC) water splitting is likely to be an important and power...
This work reports a 200 cm2 PEC-PV device that comprises four 50 cm2 PEC cells coupled in a modular ...
This report builds on our recent disclosure of a fully-integrated, photoelectrochemical (PEC) device...
We are developing an artificial photosynthetic system that will utilize sunlight and water as inputs...
Achieving high current densities while maintaining high energy conversion efficiency is one of the m...
Affordable, stable and earth-abundant photo-electrochemical materials are indispensable for the larg...
Solar water splitting provides a promising path for sustainable hydrogen production and solar energy...
The development of low cost, scalable, renewable energy technologies is one of today's most pressing...
© The Author(s) 2016. Hydrogen production via electrochemical water splitting is a promising approac...
We fabricated c-Si based wireless monolithic artificial leaf for an efficient unassisted photoelectr...
We describe the development of solar water-splitting cells comprising earth-abundant elements that o...
We report the development of a fully-integrated, photoelectrochemical (PEC) device coupling water ox...
Thin film silicon based multi-junction solar cells were developed for application in combined photov...
It has been widely recognised that fossil fuel reserves are not sufficient to cover the energy deman...
The production of synthetic fuels and chemicals from solar energy and abundant reagents offers a pro...
Although photovoltaic–electrochemical (PV–EC) water splitting is likely to be an important and power...
This work reports a 200 cm2 PEC-PV device that comprises four 50 cm2 PEC cells coupled in a modular ...
This report builds on our recent disclosure of a fully-integrated, photoelectrochemical (PEC) device...
We are developing an artificial photosynthetic system that will utilize sunlight and water as inputs...
Achieving high current densities while maintaining high energy conversion efficiency is one of the m...
Affordable, stable and earth-abundant photo-electrochemical materials are indispensable for the larg...
Solar water splitting provides a promising path for sustainable hydrogen production and solar energy...
The development of low cost, scalable, renewable energy technologies is one of today's most pressing...
© The Author(s) 2016. Hydrogen production via electrochemical water splitting is a promising approac...
We fabricated c-Si based wireless monolithic artificial leaf for an efficient unassisted photoelectr...
We describe the development of solar water-splitting cells comprising earth-abundant elements that o...
We report the development of a fully-integrated, photoelectrochemical (PEC) device coupling water ox...
Thin film silicon based multi-junction solar cells were developed for application in combined photov...
It has been widely recognised that fossil fuel reserves are not sufficient to cover the energy deman...