Gallium plasmonic nanoantennas unveiling multiple kinetics of hydrogen sensing, storage, and spillover
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Losurdo, María; Gutiérrez, Yael; Suvorova, Alexandra; Giangregorio, Maria M.; Rubanov, Sergey; Brown, April S.; Moreno Gracia, Fernando
Fecha
2021Derechos
© 2021 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH
Publicado en
Advanced Materials, 2021, 23 (29), 2100500
Editorial
Wiley-Blackwell
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Palabras clave
Gallium
Hydrogen storage
Metal hydrides
Optical hydrogen sensing
Oxygen reverse spillover
Photocatalysis
Plasmonics
Resumen/Abstract
Hydrogen is the key element to accomplish a carbon-free based economy. Here, the first evidence of plasmonic gallium (Ga) nanoantennas is provided as nanoreactors supported on sapphire (α-Al2O3) acting as direct plasmon-enhanced photocatalyst for hydrogen sensing, storage, and spillover. The role of plasmon-catalyzed electron transfer between hydrogen and plasmonic Ga nanoparticle in the activation of those processes is highlighted, as opposed to conventional refractive index-change-based sensing. This study reveals that, while temperature selectively operates those various processes, longitudinal (LO-LSPR) and transverse (TO-LSPR) localized surface plasmon resonances of supported Ga nanoparticles open selectivity of localized reaction pathways at specific sites corresponding to the electromagnetic hot-spots. Specifically, the TO-LSPR couples light into the surface dissociative adsorption of hydrogen and formation of hydrides, whereas the LO-LSPR activates heterogeneous reactions at the interface with the support, that is, hydrogen spillover into α-Al2O3 and reverse-oxygen spillover from α-Al2O3. This Ga-based plasmon-catalytic platform expands the application of supported plasmon-catalysis to hydrogen technologies, including reversible fast hydrogen sensing in a timescale of a few seconds with a limit of detection as low as 5 ppm and in a broad temperature range from room-temperature up to 600 °C while remaining stable and reusable over an extended period of time.
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