Plasmon-enhanced catalysis: distinguishing thermal and nonthermal effects
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Zhang, Xiao; Li, Xueqian; Reish, Matthew E.; Zhang, Du; Su, Neil Qiang; Gutiérrez Vela, Yael

Fecha
2018-03Derechos
Alojado según Resolución CNEAI 9/12/24 (ANECA) © 2018 American Chemical Society
Publicado en
Nano Lett. 2018, 18(3), 1714-1723
Editorial
American Chemical Society
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Palabras clave
Plasmon
Photocatalyst
Rhodium nanoparticles
Heterogeneous catalysis
Carbon dioxide reduction
Resumen/Abstract
In plasmon-enhanced heterogeneous catalysis, illumination accelerates reaction rates by generating hot carriers and hot surfaces in the constituent nanostructured metals. In order to understand how photogenerated carriers enhance the nonthermal reaction rate, the effects of photothermal heating and thermal gradients in the catalyst bed must be confidently and quantitatively characterized. This is a challenging task considering the conflating effects of light absorption, heat transport, and reaction energetics. Here, we
introduce a methodology to distinguish the thermal and nonthermal contributions from plasmon-enhanced catalysts, demonstrated by illuminated rhodium nanoparticles on oxide
supports to catalyze the CO₂ methanation reaction. By simultaneously measuring the total reaction rate and the temperature gradient of the catalyst bed, the effective thermal reaction rate may be extracted. The residual nonthermal rate of the plasmonenhanced reaction is found to grow with a superlinear dependence on illumination intensity, and its apparent quantum efficiency reaches ∼46% on a Rh/TiO₂ catalyst at a surface temperature of 350 °C. Heat and light are shown to work synergistically in these reactions: the higher the temperature, the higher the overall nonthermal efficiency in plasmon-enhanced catalysis.
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