We present here the fabrication and characterization of Au/Cu2O core-shell nanowire arrays consisting of a metallic core acting as nanostructured electrical contact, and a well-defined semiconductor shell responsible for light absorption and charge carrier generation and transport. The metallic Au core wires are first fabricated by electrodeposition in etched ion-track membranes. Diameter, length, and number density of the nanowires are adjusted by the membrane parameters. After dissolving the polymer membrane, the Au nanowire arrays are conformally coated by a Cu2O layer by electrodeposition. The thickness of the semiconductor layer is controlled by the deposition time. To increase their chemical stability in aqueous solutions the photoelectrodes are additionally coated with a thin TiO2 film by atomic layer deposition. The photoelectrochemical performance of these Au/Cu2O/TiO2 nanowire-based photoelectrodes will be presented, in particular, as a function of nanowire length, diameter, and areal density. The influence of the nanowire geometry and the core-shell arrangement on the generated photocurrent will be discussed in detail and compared with the photocurrents generated by planar Cu2O/TiO2 films.
