TY - JOUR
T1 - Probing of coupling effect induced plasmonic charge accumulation for water oxidation
AU - Gao, Yuying
AU - Cheng, Feng
AU - Fang, Weina
AU - Liu, Xiaoguo
AU - Wang, Shengyang
AU - Nie, Wei
AU - Chen, Ruotian
AU - Ye, Sheng
AU - Zhu, Jian
AU - An, Hongyu
AU - Fan, Chunhai
AU - Fan, Fengtao
AU - Li, Can
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of China Science Publishing Media Ltd.
PY - 2021/6/1
Y1 - 2021/6/1
N2 - A key issue for redox reactions in plasmon-induced photocatalysis, particularly for water oxidation, is the concentration of surface-accumulating charges (electrons or holes) at a reaction site for artificial photosynthesis. However, where plasmonic charge accumulated at a catalyst's surface, and how to improve local charge density at active sites, remains unknown because it is difficult to identify the exact spatial location and local density of the plasmon-induced charge, particularly with regard to holes. Herein, we show that at the single particle level, plasmon-coupling-induced holes can be greatly accumulated at the plasmonic Au nanoparticle dimer/TiO2 interface in the nanogap region, as directly evidenced by the locally enhanced surface photovoltage. Such an accumulation of plasmonic holes can significantly accelerate the water oxidation reaction (multi-holes involved) at the interfacial reaction site, with nearly one order of magnitude enhancement in photocatalytic activities compared to those of highly dispersed Au nanoparticles on TiO2. Combining Kelvin probe force microscopy and theoretical simulation, we further clarified that the local accumulated hole density is proportional to the square of the local near-field enhancement. Our findings advance the understanding of how charges spatially distribute in plasmonic systems and the specific role that local charge density at reaction sites plays in plasmonic photocatalysis.
AB - A key issue for redox reactions in plasmon-induced photocatalysis, particularly for water oxidation, is the concentration of surface-accumulating charges (electrons or holes) at a reaction site for artificial photosynthesis. However, where plasmonic charge accumulated at a catalyst's surface, and how to improve local charge density at active sites, remains unknown because it is difficult to identify the exact spatial location and local density of the plasmon-induced charge, particularly with regard to holes. Herein, we show that at the single particle level, plasmon-coupling-induced holes can be greatly accumulated at the plasmonic Au nanoparticle dimer/TiO2 interface in the nanogap region, as directly evidenced by the locally enhanced surface photovoltage. Such an accumulation of plasmonic holes can significantly accelerate the water oxidation reaction (multi-holes involved) at the interfacial reaction site, with nearly one order of magnitude enhancement in photocatalytic activities compared to those of highly dispersed Au nanoparticles on TiO2. Combining Kelvin probe force microscopy and theoretical simulation, we further clarified that the local accumulated hole density is proportional to the square of the local near-field enhancement. Our findings advance the understanding of how charges spatially distribute in plasmonic systems and the specific role that local charge density at reaction sites plays in plasmonic photocatalysis.
KW - charge separation
KW - coupling effect
KW - plasmonic photocatalysis
KW - spatial distribution
KW - surface photovoltage
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85119476062
U2 - 10.1093/nsr/nwaa151
DO - 10.1093/nsr/nwaa151
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85119476062
SN - 2095-5138
VL - 8
JO - National Science Review
JF - National Science Review
IS - 6
M1 - nwaa151
ER -