Summary: | This work has studied the photoelectrochemical production of hydrogen peroxide and the direct use of the produced material for the degradation (decolorization) of three common dyes: methylene blue, basic blue 41 and acid orange 7. Hydrogen peroxide was produced in the cathode compartment of a photocatalytic fuel cell by atmospheric oxygen reduction. The cell operated with a CdS-sensitized mesoporous titania photoanode and a simple carbon cloth cathode carrying a hydrophobic layer of mesoporous carbon (carbon black). The rate of hydrogen peroxide production was very high approaching 100% Faradaic efficiency. All three dyes were very stable under UV irradiation but in the presence of either commercial or photoelectrochemically produced hydrogen peroxide all three dyes were degraded. These results open a route for the conversion and storage of solar radiation in the form of chemical energy, i.e. as hydrogen peroxide, while the latter can be directly employed for environmental remediation purposes.
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