posted on 2022-07-27, 13:10authored byGregory T. Forcherio, Behnaz Ostovar, Jonathan Boltersdorf, Yi-Yu Cai, Asher C. Leff, Kyle N. Grew, Cynthia A. Lundgren, Stephan Link, David R. Baker
Understanding the nature of hot carrier pathways following
surface
plasmon excitation of heterometallic nanostructures and their mechanistic
prevalence during photoelectrochemical oxidation of complex hydrocarbons,
such as ethanol, remains challenging. This work studies the fate of
carriers from Au nanorods before and after the presence of reductively
photodeposited Pd at the single-particle level using scattering and
emission spectroscopy, along with ensemble photoelectrochemical methods.
A sub-2 nm epitaxial Pd0 shell was reductively grown onto
colloidal Au nanorods via hot carriers generated from surface plasmon
resonance excitation in the presence of [PdCl4]2–. These bimetallic Pd–Au nanorod architectures exhibited 14%
quenched emission quantum yields and 9% augmented plasmon damping
determined from their scattering spectra compared to the bare Au nanorods,
consistent with injection/separation of intraband hot carriers into
the Pd. Absorbed photon-to-current efficiency in photoelectrochemical
ethanol oxidation was enhanced 50× from 0.00034% to 0.017% due
to the photodeposited Pd. Photocurrent during ethanol oxidation improved
13× under solar-simulated AM1.5G and 40× for surface plasmon
resonance-targeted irradiation conditions after photodepositing Pd,
consistent with enhanced participation of intraband-excited sp-band holes and desorption of ethanol oxidation reaction
intermediates owing to photothermal effects.