Observation of transition from rate law to Butler-Volmer controlled water oxidation kinetics on Hematite Photoanodes

23 October 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Despite its central role in photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting, the mechanistic pathway of water oxidation on metal oxides remains unresolved, with population-based and Butler–Volmer (BV) models offering distinct views on how surface valence band holes drive the reaction. Here, we bring together these two perspectives by combining operando photoinduced absorption (PIA) spectroscopy with photocurrent analyses on α-Fe2O3 (hematite) photoanodes as a function of light intensity. We find a crossover from population-controlled, rate law water oxidation at low hole densities to a BV-like, potential driven regime at high densities, triggered by band edge unpinning once surface M–OH species are fully oxidized, and excess holes accumulate without compensation. This mechanistic transition unifies competing models of interfacial charge transfer and reveals design principles for optimising water oxidation in metal oxide photoelectrodes.

Keywords

Photoelectrochemical water splitting
Butler–Volmer kinetics
Metal oxide semiconductors
Multihole water oxidation kinetics
Band edge unpinning

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
Description
Contains full experimental methods, PIA setup details, data analysis procedures, additional figures (Figures S1–S5), and supporting discussion for reaction order extraction, band edge unpinning analysis, and control experiments on TiO₂ photoanodes.
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