화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Energy Research, Vol.43, No.1, 9-28, 2019
A review on copper vanadate-based nanostructures for photocatalysis energy production
The economic, social, and environmental aspects are important that should be notable before the selection of a method for the production of energy. Various renewable energy sources are used like hydropower, biomass, biofuel, geothermal energy, and wind energy for the production of sustainable energy that are excellent approaches to fulfill energy environmental energy demands. Renewable sources of energy give an excellent chance to extenuate the gas emission in greenhouse and reduction of global warming with the help of renewable sources of energy. The importance and utilization of the variety of renewable sources of energy are elaborated in this article. The emerging and exploring technique for the production of energy is the photocatalysis. In photocatalysis, solar spectrum is the extraneous source that is used with water to produce hydrogen energy (green energy) by the water splitting under the shower of the solar spectrum. The solar spectrum contains heat and intensity of light from which light spectrum is the abundantly used for the splitting of water. The photocatalyst is the key factor to initiate the reaction depending upon the energy band gap by absorbing the energy from the spectrum of the sun. Semiconducting materials having lower forbidden energy band gap are the basic requirements to use them as a photocatalyst for photocatalysis. Copper vanadate and their composites are the promising materials that are used as photocatalyst for the production of hydrogen energy. Copper vanadate is the focusing material that can be used as photocatalyst. It is an n-type semiconducting material with 2 eV indirect energy band gap having monoclinic structural phase which is tuned by the doping of metals like chromium, molybdenum, and silver to reduce the grain size and energy band gap and increase the surface area and optical absorption of solar light only to enhance the photocatalytic performance towards the production of hydrogen energy by water splitting in the presence of solar light.